• The floppy is dead!

    From Stephen Walsh@39:901/280 to All on Tue Apr 27 17:58:26 2010
    Hello everybody.


    http://arstechnica.com/gadgets/news/2010/04/the-once-ubiquitous-floppy-finally- being-axed-by-sony.ar s


    The once ubiquitous floppy finally being axed by Sony
    By Chris Foresman | Last updated about 16 hours ago

    The 3.5" 1.44MB HD floppy may finally be going gentle into that good night. Sony, one of just a few companies that still produce the archaic computer storage media, has announced plans to end production of floppies in March 2011.

    The company sold about 12 million 3.5" floppies in Japan last year, which represents 70 percent of that market (and incidentally, about 17TB of data capacity). Floppies are still used with legacy equipment in education and research sectors, according to Sony. However, the company cited dwindling demand as the reason for ending production.

    The 3.5" floppy largely replaced the 5.25" floppy by the early '90s, but other storage mediums had begun to replace it by the late '90s. Apple's original iMac was the first mass-market computer to come without a floppy drive in 1998, and Windows PCs gradually followed suit. Iomega's 100MB Zip disk format became quite popular for larger file transfer for a short while, before succumbing to cheap 650MB CD-Rs early last decade. Today, most file transfer happens via the Internet, USB flash drives, or relatively low-cost, high-capacity portable hard drives.

    Memorex and 3M offshoot Imation still offer floppies for sale for the time being, but with Sony ending production, we expect the floppy will rage no more against the dying of the light. Frankly, we're a little surprised it raged this long.






    Stephen

    --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5
    * Origin: -:--- Dragon's Lair ---:- telnet: bbs.vk3heg.net (39:901/280)
  • From Benny Pedersen@39:14/0 to Stephen Walsh on Tue Apr 27 16:30:30 2010
    Hello Stephen!

    27 Apr 10 17:58, Stephen Walsh wrote to All:

    Frankly, we're a little surprised it raged this long.

    crossdos on amiga helped them live longer :)

    why was crossmac filesystem not part of crossdos ?, if i remember it was seperate packaged


    Regards Benny


    ... there can only be one way of life, and it works :)

    --- Msged/LNX 6.2.0 (Linux/2.6.33-gentoo-r1 (i686))
    * Origin: http://www.region23.dk/ http://www.fido.dk/ (39:14/0)
  • From Stephen Walsh@39:901/280 to Benny Pedersen on Mon May 17 17:14:29 2010
    Hello Benny.

    27 Apr 10 16:30, you wrote to me:

    Frankly, we're a little surprised it raged this long.

    crossdos on amiga helped them live longer :)

    I doubt that he Amiga was the reason for them lasting so long. It's prob third world user's.

    I know that I've not installed a floppy in any new computers for at least the past three/four years.


    Stephen

    --- GoldED+/LNX 1.1.5
    * Origin: -:--- Dragon's Lair ---:- telnet: bbs.vk3heg.net (39:901/280)