The year: 1984.

"Welcome to Macintosh."

A long wait as the disk grinds away...

Finally, the desktop appears. Command-E. My System disk, pops out. My Program disk, MacWrite, pops in. Grinding.

MacWrite pops out. Message: "Please insert disk: 'System 2.1'". System Disk pops in.

Doubleclick on the icon of the disk, MacWrite.

System disk pops out. Message: "Please insert disk: 'MacWrite'". MacWrite pops in. A little grinding.

MacWrite pops out. Message: "Please insert disk: 'System 2.1'". System Disk pops in.

Double-click on the MacWrite application icon.

System disk pops out. Message: "Please insert disk: 'MacWrite'". MacWrite pops in. A little grinding.

MacWrite pops out. Message: "Please insert disk: 'System 2.1'". System Disk pops in. A little grinding.

System disk pops out. Message: "Please insert disk: 'MacWrite'". MacWrite pops in. A little grinding.

I think you get the idea. This could repeat many more times.

Actually, this probably wouldn't happen with simply opening MacWrite, because it was small enough to fit a copy of the system on the same disk. But it could easily happen between the system + MacWrite disk, and the disk containing the file you were working with, especially if the file was large. And heaven help you if you were using a program that was more disk intensive than MacWrite, with a system disk, program disk, and data disk all flying around.

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