Floppy disks to disappear from PC World

By Tim Ferguson, Special to ZDNet Asia
Wednesday, January 31, 2007 11:47 AM

PC World is to stop selling floppy disks once current stock has run out.

The U.K. computing retailer claims the amount of data (1.44MB) a floppy disk holds is no longer adequate for most day-to-day requirements.

In the face of newer technology, the floppy disk looks "increasingly quaint and simply isn't able to compete", said Bryan Magrath, PC World's commercial director, in a statement.

The increasing use of digital downloads and photography means many files are now too large for a floppy disk to hold and with plenty of other storage devices--USB keys, rewritable CDs, memory cards--with significantly more storage capacity, PC World feels floppy disks are now largely redundant.

The company also says the increased availability of broadband and wireless Internet connections has made small-scale removable storage devices almost obsolete.

The global market for floppy disks has been in decline since the late 1990s, with 700 million estimated to have been sold last year compared with more than two billion in 1998.

IBM introduced the first floppy disk in 1971 with Sony releasing the 3.5 inch floppy disk in 1981 which went on to become the storage standard throughout the 80s and 90s.

Tim Ferguson of Silicon.com reported from London.


WORTHWHILE?

0

0 votes
Blog

Talkback 0 comments

There are currently no comments for this post.


Tech Jobs Now!

Search for your ideal tech job:

Hands-on programming: Extract plain text from documents with Syncfusion's components

Web Development

Justin James recently tried Syncfusion's Essential DocIO and Essential PDF to help him extract text from documents he downloaded from the Internet. Here's the code he wrote to get the plain text.


Read more »



Will technology divide us further?

Blog thumbnail

So I finally watched 2012 over the weekend, but the film left me feeling extremely agitated.

The possibility that the world may meet its watery end in three years didn't..... by Eileen Yu

Read more »

Tags

  1. battery
  2. camera
  3. graphics
  4. hard drive
  5. hewlett - packard co.
  6. high tech computer corp.
  7. intel corp.
  8. keyboard
  9. microsoft windows
  10. microsoft windows mobile
  11. mobile
  12. network
  13. notebook
  14. performance
  15. screen
  16. server
  17. storage
  18. touchpad
  19. usb
  20. vat