Hmmm... well here's a two-part story (the page 2 link is at the bottom) that I
wrote back in March 2003: 
http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1759,1577143,00.asp
 - Evan
--- Vintage Computer Festival <vcf(a)siconic.com> wrote:
 I told ya so!
 
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/ap/20040906/ap_on_hi_te/…
  ath_4
 Mon Sep 6, 5:17 PM ET
 By MARK NIESSE, Associated Press Writer
 ATLANTA - Long the most common way to store letters, homework and other
 computer files, the floppy disk is going the way of the horse upon the
 arrival of the car: it'll hang around but never hold the same relevance
 in everyday life.
 And good riddance, say some home computer users. The march of technology
 must go on.
 Like the penny, the floppy drive is hardly worth the trouble, computer
 makers say.
 Dell Computer Corp. stopped including a floppy drive in new computers in
 spring 2003, and Gateway Inc. has followed suit on some models. Floppies
 are available on request for $10 to $20 extra.
 "To some customers out there, it's like a security blanket," said Dell
 spokesman Lionel Menchaca. "Every computer they've ever had has had a
 floppy, so they still feel the need to order a floppy drive."
 A few customers have complained when they found their new computers don't
 have floppy drives, but it's becoming uncommon as they realize the
 benefits of newer technologies, Menchaca said. Almost all new laptops
 don't come with a floppy.
 More and more people are willing to say goodbye to the venerable floppy,
 said Gateway spokeswoman Lisa Emard.
 "As long as we see customers request it, we'll continue to offer it," she
 said. "We'll be happy to move off the floppy once our customers are ready
 to make that move."
 Some people may hesitate to abandon the floppy just because they're so
 comfortable with it, said Tarun Bhakta, president of Vision Computers
 outside Atlanta, one of the largest computer retailers in the South.
 At his store, the basic computer model comes with all necessary
 equipment, but no floppy.
 "People say they want a floppy drive, and then I ask them, 'When was the
 last time you used it?' A lot of the time, they say, 'Never,'" Bhakta
 said.
 But plenty of regular, everyday computer users don't want to let their
 floppies go.
 "For my children, they can work at school and at home. I think they're a
 pretty good idea," said shopper Mark Ordway.
 "I just want something simple for me and my husband to use," said Pat
 Blaisdell.
 The floppy disk has several replacements, including writeable compact
 discs and keychain flash memory devices. Both can hold much more data and
 are less likely to break.
 Even so, floppies have been around since the late 1970s. People are used
 to them. They were the oldest form of removable storage still around.
 "There's always some nostalgia," said Scott Wills, an electrical and
 computer engineering professor at Georgia Tech who has held on to an old
 8-inch floppy disk. "It's a technology I'm glad to be rid of. I'd never
 label them, and I never knew what any of them were until I put them in
 and looked."
 In a sense, it's amazing floppy disks have hung around for this long.
 They only hold 1.44 megabytes of space — still enough for word
 processing documents but little else. By comparison, CDs store upward of
 700 megabytes, and the flash memory drives typically carry between 64 and
 256 megabytes.
 And it's been a long time since floppy disks were even floppy. They used
 to come in a bendable plastic casing and were 5.25 inches wide, but Apple
 Computer Inc. pioneered the smaller, higher density disks with its
 Macintosh (news - web sites) computers in the mid-1980s.
 Then Apple become the first mass-market computer manufacturer to stop
 including floppy drives altogether with the release of their iMac model
 in 1998.
 "It's not officially dead, but there's no question it's a slow
demise,"
 said Tim Bajarin, principle analyst for Creative Strategies, a technology
 consulting firm near San Jose, Calif. "You had a few people ... who were
 screaming, but in a short time, they adjusted."
 It may not be too many years before floppy disks are joined by DVDs.
 Microsoft founder Bill Gates (news - web sites) recently predicted the
 DVD would be obsolete within a decade.
 --
 Sellam Ismail                                        Vintage Computer
 Festival
 
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