
"We all know about the gadgets that get showered with constant praise - the icons, the segment leaders, and the game changers. Tech history will never forget the Altair 8800, the Walkman, the BlackBerry, and the iPhone. But people do forget - and quickly - about the devices that
failed to change the world: the great ideas doomed by mediocre execution, the gadgets that arrived before the market was really ready, or the technologies that found their stride just as the world was pivoting to something else." I was a heavy user of BeOS, Zip drives,
and MiniDisc (I was an MD user up until about 2 years ago). I'm starting to see a pattern here.
Member since:
2005-07-06
Yes, I remember at least some Sharp portable units. Keep in mind that, in practice, MD was mostly confined to Japan; was quite widespread there - and the place is, in some regards ...unique ;p & who knows what goes around over there.
And "non-widespread standards will die, sooner or later. That killed many formats with potential" veers way into the area of truisms, is not a very revealing thing to say
PS. Also checking Wiki ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MiniDisc ): "JVC, Sharp, Pioneer, Panasonic and others all producing their own MD systems" (and some of those Sharp units in: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Category:MD_players ); and it seems that MD Data was released after all.
Edited 2012-08-24 16:23 UTC