April 25, 2010 2:15 PM PDT
Sony delivers floppy disk's last rites
by Steven Musil <http://www.cnet.com/profile/stevenmusil/>
 
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The 3.5-inch floppy disk, with blank adhesive label for noting its contents.
(Credit: Wikipedia)

The days of the 3.5-inch floppy disk are now officially numbered.

Sony, which boasts 70 percent of the anemic market, announced Friday that it
would end Japanese sales of the ancient storage medium in March 2011,
according to a report in the Mainichi Daily
newspaper<http://mdn.mainichi.jp/mdnnews/business/news/20100424p2a00m0na008000c.html>.


The 3.5-inch floppy was a ubiquitous and necessary component for storing and
transferring files between personal computers for nearly three decades. Sony
pioneered the 3.5-inch floppy disk in 1981, eventually replacing the
5.25-inch floppy disk that had previously been the popular storage format.

However, as the size of files and programs grew, the floppy disk was pushed
aside by inexpensive and larger-format storage medium. Thanks to the
creation of storage methods such as CDs, DVDs, Zip, and USB drives, Sony saw
its Japanese sales of floppies decline from a record 47 million disks in
fiscal 2002 to 12 million in fiscal 2009.

Most other floppy disk manufacturers had long since pulled out of the
market, and Sony itself has already ceased sales to most of its overseas
markets.

Certainly the writing had been on the walls for years. With the release of
the iMac in 1998, Apple was the first computer maker to take the
plunge and eliminate
the floppy 
completely<http://news.cnet.com/The-iMacs-ancestors/2009-1001_3-214371.html>.
Dell followed suit in 2003 when it dropped the floppy as standard
equipment<http://news.cnet.com/Dell-foments-floppys-fall/2100-1041_3-983596.html>on
one of its Dimension desktops.

*Updated at 4:50 p.m.:* to clarify sales figures are for Japan.


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