Linked by Thom Holwerda on Mon 4th Feb 2013 12:10 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 551350
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RE: Had a window to become a high capacity floppy
by Al Dente on Mon 4th Feb 2013 16:12
in reply to "Had a window to become a high capacity floppy"
Yes, the common 1.2 and 1.44 MB floppies were hopelessly too small in the early 90's. Remember back then CDROM drives were slow and expensive and the first CD burners were over $1,000. I can remember installing Linux from 30 floppies and I even installed Windows NT 3.1 from floppies but this was so painful that I've disassociated it. I would have loved a 140 MB MiniDisk drive on my PC. The only thing I used MiniDiscs for was bootlegging concerts.




Member since:
2005-07-06
I always thought that Sony should have mass produced (or at least licensed) a PC drive that could act as a replacement for the dying floppy disk. We had various rather poor attempts at higher capacity removable media (e.g. Iomega's bleeding awful Zip drives and the equally bad SyQuest efforts) instead.
MiniDisc definitely had a window of several years to establish itself as a rewritable, random access removable media, but they never bothered to enter the PC drive market (maybe scared it would take only days to someone to release a bit-perfect Minidisc copying program?).
It wasn't until external USB drives and sticks became popular that the window of opportunity closed. I think the MiniDisc was a good format for its time, let down by Sony's narrow licensing (including a pointless new compression format for audio) and their lack of vision to expand the market beyond audio recording/playback.