
Most Macs made within the past six years have a SuperDrive, and most new software seems to be shipping on these disks. Today, the 1.4 MB floppy has finally taken over after what seemed to be a long transition period. Two years later, the double-sided drive brought 800 KB disks into light, followed by the 1.4M SuperDrive in 1988.* The 2.8 MB extended density disks were never brought to the Mac (nor were they popular on IBMs). The first disks were single-sided and held roughly 400 KB of data. When the Mac came out in 1984, the floppy disk was the only type of storage medium available. For more about this document’s history and Baret’s experiences with Macs through his school years, see About This Article at the end of the page.

Scott Baret wrote and drew the original work in 1995 at the age of eight and began revising it a year ago.
