For older motherboards that require a floppy to update the BIOS, it's
easily done from a bootable floppy disk.  Back in the days when I used
to run Windows, I always did it that way because I didn't trust having
Windows running while doing something as critical as a BIOS update. The
OS installed on the HDD is irrelevant.  As long as all the hardware is
correct and properly recognized by the motherboard, you don't even have
to have an OS installed to do a BIOS update and in fact, many system
builders will argue that it's a good idea to update the BIOS prior to
installing the OS.

I don't mean this to be a dismissal of the need for floppy support.
It's still needed by people for other use cases with devices that only
read/write their data to floppy.  It's just that for BIOS management,
it's simply not needed.

If you read through the link provided in #108 above, you will find
several mentions of (relatively) simple cli solutions for mounting and
unmounting the floppy.  These can be semi-automated to 1 click solutions
as launchers on the top panel.  Not ideal, but a usable workaround till
this (hopefully) gets fixed.

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/255651

Title:
  floppy disk drive not detected (module not loaded) in Intrepid and
  Jaunty

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