Sony finally ending production of floppy disks

updated 10:55 am EDT, Mon April 26, 2010

 

Sony halts 3.5in disks in Japan by March 2011


Sony this weekend said it would finally put an end to floppy disk production in its home country, marking the effective end to the format's 41-year run. Having already stopped selling floppies in most areas as of March this year, it now expects to stop sales of 3.5-inch disks in Japan as of March 2011. Developing markets like India continue to sell the disks today, but their fate isn't known.

The cutoff comes as the result of both changes in design philosophy and technology. Apple was one of the first to aggressively move away from floppies as it dropped all floppies from the iMac in 1998 and the rest of its lineup soon afterwards. The format remained popular for years later but declined rapidly as writable optical discs, USB flash drives and the Internet made the 1.44MB disk obsolete. Virtually no desktops or notebooks now even have the option of a floppy drive.

Swelling file sizes have also made floppies impractical, as virtually anything other than text is now too large to fit the available space. Some PC computer and mainboard companies had been using floppies for firmware updates even late into the last decade, but this has also been phased out.


By Electronista Staff

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iMac, sony, computers, industry, upgrades/storage, Apple
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Previous Comments

  1. WiseWeasel

    Junior Member

    Joined: Apr 1999

    +10

    Hah!

    Take that, floppies! Your days of destroying everyone's data are over! Now we have the last laugh!


  1. Geoduck

    Junior Member

    Joined: Jan 2010

    +8

    At one time

    Floppies were reliable. In the early '90s I had no qualms about carrying critical data from place to place on a floppy. Remember the term sneakernet? In later years the quality started to decline. The last box of Floppies I bought, something like a decade ago, had 3 out of 10 that were unreadable out of the box. That's when I knew they were history.

    The other thing that killed the floppy was, as the article says, that files have gotten too big. A 1.4 Mb floppy just can't hold much other than a couple of RTF documents and BAT files. I have an old USB Jump drive that holds 128Mb and it's often too small.

    Times change, computing evolves, and things become obsolete.

    RIP Floppy


  1. iphonerulez

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Nov 2008

    +2

    I really hated those floppy disks...

    From the 400 KB to the 800 KB dual-sided to the 1.4 MB. I was so happy when hard drives were available. Using them was like playing the lottery.

    I tried all sorts of different brands, but overall, they often gave me problems with data retrieval after sitting a month or two (even sitting in the box in a cool place with no metal around). I had better experiences with 5.25 diskettes than the newer types. No matter. All my floppies got chucked and all the information that was on them since all my drives were gone after Apple pulled floppy drives from everything.

    I'm glad floppy disks are gone forever. Of course, Windows will forever support them like it does every obsolete piece of hardware. Ten years from now Microsoft will be bragging about backwards support for floppy drives in Windows 15 and people will wonder what exactly the h*** is a floppy drive.


  1. Geoduck

    Junior Member

    Joined: Jan 2010

    +3

    One good thing about Floppies

    If you needed to destroy a file for security reasons they could be snapped in half more easily than CDs. CDs throw shards and would stab your hand.


  1. Jonathan-Tanya

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Oct 2004

    +1

    I had a use for a floppy just 2 years ago

    I had to give a windows install - XP I believe, driver support for the on-board raid, this had to be done during the install of XP as the RAID set was to become the boot drive, and the CD/DVD drive was occupied by the XP install disk.

    In theory you could burn a new XP install disk with the driver slipstreamed, but the standard way of doing it, and still the easiest, was to load the driver from a floppy - I had to install the floppy drive, just to do it.

    That was my last use of a floppy disk...I must gone through 10 old floppy disks, to find one that was still usable for that task. After the OS was installed I never needed the floppy drive again, but I just left it installed int he machine, since neither did I need the drive anywhere else.


  1. chas_m

    Moderator

    Joined: Aug 2001

    +3

    In Other News

    Telegraph operators report that business is down dramatically.


  1. martinX

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Sep 2008

    +3

    Stiffies

    Guy from South Africa told me the 5 1/4" discs were already known locally as floppies and so to differentiate them the 3 1/2 discs were nicknamed "stiffies". And they were advertised as "would you rather have a 5 1/4" floppy or a 3 1/2" stiffie?"


  1. eclux

    Fresh-Faced Recruit

    Joined: Jul 2008

    +2

    41 year run?

    I admit that I'm old enough to question this statement. I remember 1969. I remember magnetic tape, punched cards, punched paper tape. I don't remember any removable rotating flexible magnetic media. Removable rigid "disk packs" yes. But floppies?

    Wikipedia, for what it's worth, says IBM introduced the 8" floppy format in 1971. Perhaps Sony was ahead of the curve, as usual.


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