Difference between revisions of "Pack of floppies"

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(why not, added bit on capacity (hey, i managed to only *hint* at the variable spindle speed/constant linear velocity 400k/800k mac floppies rather than delve into a multiparagraph explanation of the concept))
(bit of formatting - definitely need to trim this origin section...)
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{{wikipedia|Floppy disk}}
 
 
{{tool
 
{{tool
 
   |color=red
 
   |color=red
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   |material=plastic
 
   |material=plastic
 
}}
 
}}
The '''pack of floppies''' is a [[tool]] in [[NetHack: The Next Generation]]. When unidentified, it appears as a '''box containing little plastic cards'''.  [[Geek]]s start with a pack of floppies in their inventory.
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A '''pack of floppies''' is a [[tool]] in that appears in [[NetHack: The Next Generation]] and [[SlashTHEM]]. It is made of [[plastic]], and appears as a '''box containing little plastic cards''' when unidentified.
  
Most roles will have no use for a pack of floppies. However, the computer-savvy—namely, Geeks (and in [[SlashTHEM]], [[Graduate]]s)—are able to "read" the contents of floppies by [[apply]]ing them. This process allegedly involves looking at the magnetic surface, so it cannot be done if the player is [[blind]]. When you "read" the disk, you will see one of six things on it:
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A pack of floppies is the [[base item]] for two [[quest artifact]]s: [[The Nethack Sources]] and the [[Master Boot Disk]].
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==Generation==
 +
[[Geek]]s and [[Hacker]]s start with a pack of floppies in their inventory.
 +
 
 +
==Description==
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A Geek or Hacker can "read" the contents of floppies by [[apply]]ing them while not [[blind]], revealing one of six potential disk labels at random:
  
 
* Microsoft Windows 3.1
 
* Microsoft Windows 3.1
 
* Bill Gates
 
* Bill Gates
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leisure_Suit_Larry_5:_Passionate_Patti_Does_a_Little_Undercover_Work Leisure Suit Larry V]
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* [[wikipedia:Leisure Suit Larry 5|Leisure Suit Larry V]]
 
* LINUX 1.00
 
* LINUX 1.00
 
* your NetHack [[patch]]es
 
* your NetHack [[patch]]es
 
* "nothing of importance"
 
* "nothing of importance"
  
Which set of contents you find is randomly selected, not a property of the item, so you are unlikely to get the same message every time you read the floppies. (Possibly these are all on separate disks in the pack, and when you read the pack you select one at random.) 
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Reading "Microsoft Windows 3.1" will print [[YAFM]] and cause you to become [[confused]] for 50-100 turns, while finding "Bill Gates" also prints [[YAFM]], but has no other effect. The other disk labels have no effect when read.
 
 
Most of these messages have no other effects. However, if you find "Microsoft Windows 3.1", you "shriek in pain" and become [[confused]] for 50-100 turns. If you find "Bill Gates", "You feel horrible", but there is no other effect.
 
  
 
==Strategy==
 
==Strategy==
 
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Most roles will have no use for a pack of floppies. However, Geeks and Graduates can use them to reap the benefits of reading certain [[scroll]]s [[Confusion#Confused scroll effects|while confused]] - a non-cursed [[unicorn horn]] is ideal to cure the confusion afterward.
Because some scrolls give [[Confusion#Confused scroll effects|beneficial effects]] if read while confused, confusion is sometimes a desirable status, so the pack of floppies can actually be very useful to roles that are able to use it. Just apply it until you come across Windows, read your scroll(s), and then apply a non-cursed [[unicorn horn]] to cure the confusion. It can be used as a substitute for a cursed unihorn, with the advantage that there is no risk of unwanted effects like [[attribute]] loss or [[illness]] (other than 'feeling horrible', which does not affect gameplay).
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<!--save these for the actual article and ditch once they're used
 
 
 
==Artifacts==
 
==Artifacts==
The pack of floppies is the [[base item]] for two [[quest artifact]]s, the Nethack Sources and the Master Boot Disk.
 
 
 
'''The Nethack Sources''' is the [[Geek]] quest artifact, a neutral-aligned pack of floppies that grants [[searching]], [[ESP]], and [[regeneration]] while carried. It can be [[invoke]]d to [[identify]] items, presumably by very fast [[source diving]].
 
'''The Nethack Sources''' is the [[Geek]] quest artifact, a neutral-aligned pack of floppies that grants [[searching]], [[ESP]], and [[regeneration]] while carried. It can be [[invoke]]d to [[identify]] items, presumably by very fast [[source diving]].
  
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*artilist.h 459, 465
 
*artilist.h 459, 465
*artifact.c 1635
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*artifact.c 1635-->
  
 
==Origin==
 
==Origin==
Floppy disks are a dated (1960s-1990s) form of data storage, consisting of circular pieces of a flexible material on which the data is magnetically recorded. With more efficient storage media such as optical drives, flash drives, and cloud storage available to modern computer users, floppies are now rarely seen, except occasionally on legacy systems (particularly industrial equipment), and some present-day computer users have probably never used a floppy disk, or even a computer that has a floppy drive. However, during the early years of [[NetHack]]'s development, floppy disks would have been a standard medium for storing and exchanging files, including personal copies of the NetHack source and patches, so they appear as part of the starting inventory of the Geek, a tribute to NetHack players.
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{{wikipedia|Floppy disk}}
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Floppy disks are a dated form of data storage used from the 1960s to the 1990s, consisting of circular pieces of a flexible material on which the data is magnetically recorded. With more efficient storage media such as optical drives, flash drives, and cloud storage available to modern computer users, floppies are now rarely seen, except occasionally on legacy systems (particularly industrial equipment), and some present-day computer users have probably never used a floppy disk, or even a computer that has a floppy drive. However, during the early years of [[NetHack]]'s development, floppy disks would have been a standard medium for storing and exchanging files, including personal copies of the NetHack source and patches, so they appear as part of the starting inventory of the Geek, a tribute to NetHack players.
  
 
Floppy disks came in a variety of form factors, but the most prominent sizes were the original 8" disks used on business systems, the 5.25" disks ('mini-floppies') common to the Apple II and early PCs, and the 3.5" disks ('micro-floppies') used on Macs and later PCs.  The name "floppy disks" is somewhat counterintuitive when used to describe the later 3.5" disks: these have a rigid plastic case, and hence are not "floppy".  However, earlier floppy disks, like the 5.25" and 8" disks, had a flexible case, and were thus known as "floppy" disks since their invention circa 1970.  This item's unidentified description ''"box containing little plastic cards"'' suggests that these disks are in fact 3.5" disks.
 
Floppy disks came in a variety of form factors, but the most prominent sizes were the original 8" disks used on business systems, the 5.25" disks ('mini-floppies') common to the Apple II and early PCs, and the 3.5" disks ('micro-floppies') used on Macs and later PCs.  The name "floppy disks" is somewhat counterintuitive when used to describe the later 3.5" disks: these have a rigid plastic case, and hence are not "floppy".  However, earlier floppy disks, like the 5.25" and 8" disks, had a flexible case, and were thus known as "floppy" disks since their invention circa 1970.  This item's unidentified description ''"box containing little plastic cards"'' suggests that these disks are in fact 3.5" disks.
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It is possible to access 3.5" disks on virtually any modern computer: USB floppy drives are common, and drivers to read the disks are still present in modern editions of Linux.  However, options for reading older disks are quite limited: there are no USB 5.25" or 8" drives available, and no modern operating systems support them.  Outside of specialized devices, the best option is to set up a "period" computer with the appropriate diskette drive, and some way of communicating with more modern hardware (e.g. a network connection, serial port, or even simply a 3.5" floppy drive).
 
It is possible to access 3.5" disks on virtually any modern computer: USB floppy drives are common, and drivers to read the disks are still present in modern editions of Linux.  However, options for reading older disks are quite limited: there are no USB 5.25" or 8" drives available, and no modern operating systems support them.  Outside of specialized devices, the best option is to set up a "period" computer with the appropriate diskette drive, and some way of communicating with more modern hardware (e.g. a network connection, serial port, or even simply a 3.5" floppy drive).
 
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{{variant-343}}
[[Category: NetHack: The Next Generation]]
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[[Category:NetHack: The Next Generation items]]
[[Category: SlashTHEM]]
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[[Category:SlashTHEM items]]

Revision as of 12:01, 27 September 2023

(
Name pack of floppies
Appearance box containing little plastic cards
Base price 300 zm
Weight 0
Material plastic
Monster use Will not be used by monsters.

A pack of floppies is a tool in that appears in NetHack: The Next Generation and SlashTHEM. It is made of plastic, and appears as a box containing little plastic cards when unidentified.

A pack of floppies is the base item for two quest artifacts: The Nethack Sources and the Master Boot Disk.

Generation

Geeks and Hackers start with a pack of floppies in their inventory.

Description

A Geek or Hacker can "read" the contents of floppies by applying them while not blind, revealing one of six potential disk labels at random:

Reading "Microsoft Windows 3.1" will print YAFM and cause you to become confused for 50-100 turns, while finding "Bill Gates" also prints YAFM, but has no other effect. The other disk labels have no effect when read.

Strategy

Most roles will have no use for a pack of floppies. However, Geeks and Graduates can use them to reap the benefits of reading certain scrolls while confused - a non-cursed unicorn horn is ideal to cure the confusion afterward.

Origin

Floppy disks are a dated form of data storage used from the 1960s to the 1990s, consisting of circular pieces of a flexible material on which the data is magnetically recorded. With more efficient storage media such as optical drives, flash drives, and cloud storage available to modern computer users, floppies are now rarely seen, except occasionally on legacy systems (particularly industrial equipment), and some present-day computer users have probably never used a floppy disk, or even a computer that has a floppy drive. However, during the early years of NetHack's development, floppy disks would have been a standard medium for storing and exchanging files, including personal copies of the NetHack source and patches, so they appear as part of the starting inventory of the Geek, a tribute to NetHack players.

Floppy disks came in a variety of form factors, but the most prominent sizes were the original 8" disks used on business systems, the 5.25" disks ('mini-floppies') common to the Apple II and early PCs, and the 3.5" disks ('micro-floppies') used on Macs and later PCs. The name "floppy disks" is somewhat counterintuitive when used to describe the later 3.5" disks: these have a rigid plastic case, and hence are not "floppy". However, earlier floppy disks, like the 5.25" and 8" disks, had a flexible case, and were thus known as "floppy" disks since their invention circa 1970. This item's unidentified description "box containing little plastic cards" suggests that these disks are in fact 3.5" disks.

Floppy disks varied greatly in capacity, depending both on the "density" of the disk itself, whether one or both sides were used, and the geometric pattern used by the floppy drive to record data on the disk. A single-sided 5.25" floppy could have as little as 140KB of usable storage, while the largest "common" floppy capacity was 1.44MB for 3.5" disks (though limited numbers of 2.88MB disks and drives were produced). Later proprietary "superfloppy" systems such as Iomega zip disks had capacities of up to 750MB, but these never gained wide acceptance, being incompatible with existing disks and emerging only shortly before more practical solutions such as rewritable CDs and USB flash drives.

It is possible to access 3.5" disks on virtually any modern computer: USB floppy drives are common, and drivers to read the disks are still present in modern editions of Linux. However, options for reading older disks are quite limited: there are no USB 5.25" or 8" drives available, and no modern operating systems support them. Outside of specialized devices, the best option is to set up a "period" computer with the appropriate diskette drive, and some way of communicating with more modern hardware (e.g. a network connection, serial port, or even simply a 3.5" floppy drive).