Monday, July 14, 2008

Howard Behrens Lake Como Landing painting

Howard Behrens Lake Como Landing painting
Gustav Klimt Beethoven Frieze painting

Long the most common way to store letters, homework and other computer files, the floppy disk is going the same way of the horse upon the arrival of the car: it'll hang around but never hold the ...
Long the most common way to store letters, homework and other computer files, the floppy disk is going the same way of the horse upon the arrival of the car: it'll hang around but never hold the same relevance in everyday life. And good riddance, say some home computer users. The march of technology must go on. Dell Computer Corp. stopped including a floppy drive in new computers in spring 2003, and Gateway Inc. has followed suit on some models. Floppies are available on request for $10 to $20 extra. More and more people are willing to say goodbye to the venerable floppy, said Gateway spokeswoman Lisa Emard.

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