![]() Or even better, "sudo lshw > $HOME/Documents/my_hardware.txt", then view my_hardware.txt. Pull up a Linux terminal and do the following: "sudo lshw | more". It would just be a filesystem mounted at a directory. There would be nothing "floppy" about it. So you cannot "create an virtual floopy disk in linux and use it like as a normal disk (like vfd in windows)". All this is doing is having the files in that filesystem image displayed in the directory where you mount the image to. You can image any filesystem with dd and mount it in Linux. A plain vanilla Linux kernel _does_ have the ability to take an image of a filesystem and mount it. It's important to realise that a plain vanilla Linux kernel does _not_ have the ability to emulate hardware. Been meaning to comment here on this for a while. I know this thread is a little old, but I've been doing some "Internet clean-up" recently concerning this very subject. VFD in Windows _does_ emulate a floppy drive. Be mindful that such mounting of floppy images does _not_ emulate a floppy drive.
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