--- Adrian Graham <witchy at binarydinosaurs.co.uk> wr
ote:
On 6/2/07 21:55, "aliensrcooluk at
yahoo.co.uk"
<aliensrcooluk at yahoo.co.uk>
wrote:
I remember CD caddies :)
I recall back at secondary school in my first
year there (year 7 for UK'ers), in 1990/1, that
the new computer in the library used CD's
which were in see through plastic.
Essentially the "CD" of the time was like
floppy discs - the writable media (medium?)
was encased in protective plastic shell.
Sounds like the Philips 1x speed CD that was used
by
DEC as the RRD40. It
took standard CD-ROMs but they were inserted in a
plastic shell because the
drive had no tray or any other means of supporting
the CD.
My own RRD40 caddies are 250 miles away but I've g
ot
a drive at work :)
In the meanwhile, look towards the bottom of this
page:
http://home.claranet.nl/users/pb0aia/cm/sroom.html
--
Adrian/Witchy
Binary Dinosaurs creator/curator
Www.binarydinosaurs.co.uk - the UK's biggest priva
te
home computer
collection?
Thanks.
Yeah, that looks about right. So why were the
caddies ditched?? Was it simply cost, or that
the CD drives themselves were improved?
Regards,
Andrew D. Burton
aliensrcooluk at yahoo.co.uk