Still, Linus’ quiet announcement comes as a minor jolt to anyone of A Certain Age for whom the floppy disk and the computer were once inseparable. The save icon in LibreOffice and other desktop software is probably the last place the floppy exerts a hold over us. The floppy is dead, and has been for a long time. It’s well over a decade since they ceased to be fitted to desktop and laptop computers, and where once they were a staple of any office they now exist only in the “save” icon on your wordprocessor. It’s a very reasonable view to have arrived at because outside the realm of retrocomputing the physical rather than virtual floppy disk has all but disappeared. Its maintainer no longer has working floppy hardware upon which to test the software, and Linus remarks that “ I think the driver can be considered pretty much dead from an actual hardware standpoint“, though he does point out that active support remains for USB floppy drives. What makes it worthy of note is that he remarks that the floppy driver is now orphaned. The code in question contains a few patches to the driver for native floppy disc controllers. About a week ago, Linus Torvalds made a software commit which has an air about it of the end of an era.
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