Memory diskette: Difference between revisions

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{{Top|leg}}
{{Top|leg}}
{{Unlicensed}}
{{Unlicensed}}
'''Memory diskettes''' were [[Droid/Legends|droid]] parts that functioned as the central processing area of a unit.<ref name="TO">''[[Troublesome Outing]]''</ref> Such pieces of technology were similar to the [[Droid brain/Legends|droid brains]] and the [[Verbobrain/Legends|verbobrains]].<ref name="EGD">''[[The Essential Guide to Droids]]''</ref> [[Professor/Legends|Professor]] [[Cantebarius H. Broom]], a deranged [[Scientist/Legends|scientist]], was known to deactivate droids by removing their memory diskettes.<ref name="TO" />
'''Memory diskettes''' were [[Droid/Legends|droid]] parts that functioned as the central processing area of a unit.<ref name="TO">''[[Troublesome Outing]]''</ref> Such pieces of technology were similar to the [[Droid brain/Legends|droid brains]] and the [[Verbobrain/Legends|verbobrains]]. [[Professor/Legends|Professor]] [[Cantebarius H. Broom]], a deranged [[Scientist/Legends|scientist]], was known to deactivate droids by removing their memory diskettes.<ref name="TO" />


==Behind the scenes==
==Behind the scenes==

Latest revision as of 15:22, 2 March 2023

This article contains information from an unlicensed Star Wars Legends source.

This article's subject originated in a source that was released outside of the Lucas Licensing process, and its licensing status was never confirmed by Lucasfilm Ltd.

Memory diskettes were droid parts that functioned as the central processing area of a unit.[1] Such pieces of technology were similar to the droid brains and the verbobrains. Professor Cantebarius H. Broom, a deranged scientist, was known to deactivate droids by removing their memory diskettes.[1]

Behind the scenes

The memory diskettes were first mentioned in Troublesome Outing,[1] a Spanish story of undetermined canonicity that was published in 1986.[2] Abel G. Peña, who translated the story in English for the first time in 2013, referred to the use of the word "diskette" as a "quaint anachronism." In the 1980s, massive-memory cloud storage and flash drives were still inconceivable. But nowadays, diskettes look out of place in the futuristic Star Wars universe.[3]

Appearances

Notes and references