Your cable is upside down.
Because of the low data storage.. Normally FDD stores only 1.44 MB of data and printer drivers could need more space..
If your system has a floppy drive you can use another computer to place the needed driver on a floppy disk an then reinstall them.You could use a USB drive to transfer the drivers to the computer if no floppy drive is present.There are also several ways to connect a second computer to the faulty system so the needed drivers can be transferred and installed.
Yes. Some some times the cartilage in a frenchie's ears does not form properly for whatever reason and they will always have floppy ears. The malformation can just be a genetic defect or could have been caused by some type of trauma when cartilage was forming.
Download the SATA drivers from the Acer website. Extract the files onto a FLOPPY DISKETTE Open the acer and connect a floppy drive to the motherboard and the power supply (Fortunatly Acer have still left these connectors available) Start to install the Vista on the Acer. When it requires a driver for the CD/DVD player, go and look on the floppy disk. All should then be fine
It would all depend on the error you are getting . The possible reason is incompatible drivers . It could also be corrupt drivers on your windows OS causing the problems
Modern 3.5" floppy disks were/are double sided. Earlier 5.25" floppy disks started out single sided but you could cut out a read only slot and flip them over and use both sides, no guarantees though. Even earlier 8" floppy disks were also single sided but could likewise be cut and flipped over. This is from my own experience not from research.
A common cause for this issue is missing software or drivers. Another reason could be a damaged drive that no longer works properly.
Because floppy drives (like CD-ROM drives) are very inexpensive. It will cost you $10 at the high end for a brand new floppy drive, just asking a technician to look at your floppy drive could cost more than that.
50mm drivers could be loudspeakers. (Tweeters)
Computers made today generally do not have any floppy drives at all. PCs traditionally had 2 floppy drives (A: and B:) but might have only one of these. The original Mac had 1 floppy drive. Early microcomputers could frequently have as many as 4 floppy drives. (I had one with this capability but I never connected more than 3 floppy drives, these were 8 inch double sided double density drives).
my dog has floppy ears and brown stuff is coming out of them what could that be
Yes. it could be used for a few times. but sometimes there are chances that the floppy may get virus and become corrupt after using a couple of times