Floppy disks scrapped by PC World
By Nicole Kobie,
A fan of floppy disks? Then get them while you can! The iconic devices will no longer be stocked by major retailer PC World once current supplies run out.
"The sound of a computer's floppy disk drive will be as closely associated with 20th century computing as the sound of a computer dialling in to the internet," said Bryan Magrath, commercial director of PC World.
Introduced in 1971 by IBM, the first floppy - an eight-inch plastic disk - was invented by Alan Shugart and held just 100 kilobytes of data. The first three-and-a-half inch floppy drives and disks were released by Sony in 1981.
But growing storage needs have pushed USB sticks and memory cards to the forefront of portable storage. The floppy disk, with its 1.44 megabytes of data, pales in comparison to the gigabytes on offer with modern portable storage.
"The pace of technological change is relentless and it is now increasingly standard for computer users to transfer data via the internet or use USB memory sticks, some of which will store the equivalent of 1,000 times the capacity of floppy disk," Magrath said. "With that amount of memory available in such a small and convenient device, the floppy disk looks increasingly quaint and simply isn't able to compete."
Now, only two per cent of PCs and laptops sold by the retailer have in-built floppy disk drives. By summer, PC World expects that none of its computers will feature an "A: drive".
PC World's parent company, DSG International, previously made news for pulling video recorders and analogue cameras from their stores' shelves.
You may also like...
Sponsored Links
advertisement
You may also like...
Latest Storage Analysis & Insight
Q&A: Cisco on servers, storage and strategy
We chat with Laurent Blanchard, Cisco's vice president of enterprise, to ask why IT should get excited about what the networking giant can offer.
- 2011: The year in news
- Technology: out of stock
- HP PCs back on the menu with Dellish plans
- Michael Dell: Back from the brink?
- The business challenge of big data
- Getting inside the minds of ethical hackers
- Miracle Workers: rescuing data from the jaws of disaster
- EMC World 2011: Q&A, Adrian McDonald, president of EMEA North
- Top 10 most embarrassing data breaches
Latest Storage Reviews
Boston Quattro 1332-T review
Rating: ![]()
- Synology RackStation RS3411xs review
- QNap TS-879 Pro TurboNAS review
- Enhance Technology UltraStor RS16 IP-4 review
- Infortrend EonStor ESDS S16S-R2240-4 review
- Fujitsu Eternus DX90 S2 review
- Iomega StorCenter px6-300d review
- Seagate GoFlex Desk 4TB review
- Thecus N5200XXX review
- Buffalo TeraStation Pro 8 Bay review
advertisement
Most popular
- Google releases Chrome for Android beta
- Will someone rid me of these troublesome Macs?
- OneNote hits Google?s Android
- BlackBerry Bold 9790 review
- Google sends in Bouncer to sort out malicious apps
- Ubuntu vs. Windows 7 on the business desktop
- Who to trust after the VeriSign hack?
- Head to Head: Mac OS X 10.7 Lion vs Windows 7
- ACTA: the basics, the controversies, and the future
- BT considering Ofcom price cap appeal
Latest News Videos in Storage
Video: Steve Murphy, Hitachi Data Systems
IT PRO speaks to Steve Murphy, UK Managing Director of storage technology specialist Hitachi Data Systems.
Register for IT PRO
You'll get exclusive member benefits including free whitepapers, downloads, Webinars and weekly newsletters full of the latest IT PRO news, reviews, insight and expertise.





