软盘的保存之道
What It Takes to Preserve Floppy Disks

原始链接: https://spectrum.ieee.org/floppy-disk-data-preservation-archives

剑桥大学图书馆与档案馆的技术分析师 Leontien Talboom 最近牵头开展了“未来怀旧”(Future Nostalgia)项目,旨在挽救老旧软盘中的数据。这项举措至关重要,因为这些磁盘的物理磁层正在不断降解,而维护它们所需的专业知识也随着最初开发者的退休而逐渐消失。 Talboom 与复古计算社区合作,利用小众的技术专长绕过硬件限制,从各种往往缺乏文档记录的商业和研究系统中提取数据。这一过程需要结合数字取证与物理维护,例如手动松开内部组件以确保驱动器能够读取数据。 Talboom 强调,可持续的数据保存不仅仅是简单的存储,更需要积极的管理。通过将数据从过时的介质转移到现代数字格式,档案管理员可以监控文件的“比特腐烂”(bit rot)情况,并确保其长期的可访问性。归根结底,该项目凸显了主动进行数字保存的重要性,以防止储存在日渐衰退的旧技术上的历史信息永久丢失。

最近关于软盘保存的一场 Hacker News 讨论,重点介绍了维护及恢复旧存储介质数据的关键技术策略。 参与者强调了适当硬件维护的重要性,特别建议使用纯度 99% 的异丙醇来清洁读写磁头。用户建议利用专业的纤维光学清洁用品(如高质量棉签和 Kimtech 擦拭纸)作为通用套件的更优且更经济的替代方案。 讨论还探讨了针对易损或退化磁盘的高级数据恢复技术。一位用户提出使用高分辨率成像技术(如电子显微镜或磁场相机)直接绘制磁盘表面的磁信号图。该方法无需物理驱动器的机械压力即可恢复数据,甚至可能通过分析残留磁迹来检索已被覆盖的信息。对于那些希望深入了解保存技术细节的人,社区推荐《软盘指南》(The Floppy Guide,网址:digipres.org)作为权威参考资源。
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原文

Floppy disks are several decades old—many of the disks are degrading and the data stored on them is at risk of being lost. In response, Leontien Talboom, a technical analyst at Cambridge University Libraries and Archives, led a roughly year-long project preserving floppy disks called “Future Nostalgia,” which concluded in January.

Leontien Talboom

Leontien Talboom is a technical analyst at Cambridge University Libraries and Archives, where she transfers material from a wide range of storage media to make them accessible to archivists.

IEEE Spectrum spoke to Talboom about her work preserving data from Cambridge’s collection of floppy disks and collecting knowledge about the disks themselves.

Why is it important to preserve floppy disks now?

Leontien Talboom: Two reasons. First, the physical media is starting to degrade. Floppy disks are made from plastic, but they’ve got a magnetic layer of iron oxide, and that’s deteriorating. A lot of floppy disks are found in attics or garages, which means they also suffer from mold.

Second, a lot of people who developed floppy disks and systems that use floppy disks are starting to retire or pass away, which means that a lot of tacit knowledge is disappearing.

Whom did you go to for that tacit knowledge?

Talboom: I went to the retro computing community. Their work is more around preserving these machines to keep them running [than] the data that lives on the floppy disk. But they know their stuff about floppy disks.

For example, they know that in a lot of the older disks, the inside of the disk—the doughnut—gets stuck to the top. So if you flex the casing, the doughnut falls down again. If I hadn’t known that, I would have assumed that those disks in our collection were broken or corrupt.

What is the most difficult part of working with floppy disks?

Talboom: Accessing the files can be quite challenging if we don’t understand the file system. Within libraries and archives, we get a lot of material from machines that are not as well loved. Many of the personal computers that you had at home, such as the Amstrad or ZX Spectrum or BBC Micro, are very well documented. But a bunch of our material comes from business or research systems. They’re not as nostalgic for people, so there’s not as big a community preserving this type of material.

Do you have a favorite type of floppy disk?

Talboom: Five and a quarter. The weirder the system, the more frustrating and fun it is. I quite like doing that detective work.

The Amstrad disk has also really stolen my heart. The popularity of floppy disks is very geographically dependent. Our library, for example, has these Amstrad 3-inch disks. But if you go to the U.S., they’re really uncommon. They weren’t able to manufacture enough of these drives, and [3.5-inch disks] took over at a certain point. But they’re really cute.

What’s the best method for sustainably storing data?

Talboom: The main thing is actively looking after it. A lot of the floppy disks we get in the library haven’t been accessed for 20 or 30 years, which means that you need certain special hardware to actually read them, and then work with emulators or other tools to make these file formats accessible.

Now that we’ve done that work and transferred it, we can monitor it and make sure it’s not suffering from anything like bit rot. We can also make decisions around migrating it to other file formats or working on specific file systems or unknown file formats in more detail.

This article appears in the June 2026 print issue as “Leontien Talboom.”

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