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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!agate!andywang
- From: andywang@crown.berkeley.edu (Andrew Wang)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.misc
- Subject: Re: Pizza Hut erases diskettes
- Date: 30 Dec 1992 18:43:22 GMT
- Organization: University of California, Berkeley
- Lines: 32
- Message-ID: <1hsqkaINNlrs@agate.berkeley.edu>
- References: <1992Dec30.000429.24047@panix.com> <C02yEv.Dxp@ccu.umanitoba.ca>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: crown.berkeley.edu
-
- charltn@ccu.umanitoba.ca (Jim Charlton) writes:
-
- >In <1992Dec30.000429.24047@panix.com> schuster@panix.com (Michael Schuster) writes:
-
- >>I'd often wondered about the magnetic safety of mailing diskettes.
- >>Wondered how many diskettes that arrived unreadable were really
- >>due to exposure to magnetic fields during transit.
-
- >>Today in my mailbox was a post card from Pizza Hut. Taped to it was
- >>a magnetic sticker, suitable for posting on your refrigerator door,
- >>with the phone number of my local store.
-
- >>Good thing no software publisher was mass-mailing update diskettes
- >>this week, eh?
-
- >I also wondered how susceptible disks were to magnetic fields. So I
- >took a disk, half filled with files, and exposed it to the field of a
- >strong horseshoe magnet (3 1/2" diskette). While I could easily pick
- >the disk up by its metal gate I could not in any way corrupt the data
- >on the disk! I suspect that data is much less vulnerable to static
- >magnetic fields than is commonly thought. Alternating current
- >electromagnets/transformers etc. may be much more damaging but I conducted
- >no tests with alternating fields.
- > jim...
- >charltn@ccu.umanitoba.ca
-
- I took a bunch of old 360k floppies and put them in the middle of
- a 12" monitor degaussing coil. After 10 seconds of degaussing, I tried
- three of the diskettes and could still read their directories no problem.
- I didn't try to read any files, though.
-
- Andrew
-