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floppy disks or floppy disks were one of the most popular forms of storage in the 1980s and 1990s, falling out of favor in the new millennium.
Although they were discontinued in 2011 When sony made the decision to die, floppy disks they stay alive.
One of his fans Bill Gateswho reminded them by mentioning a Wired article about their prevalence.
“I can’t stop thinking about the good old days while reading this. He diskette It has always held a special place in my heart and it’s funny to see it still being used on some special occasions,” the philanthropist and founder tweeted. Microsoft.
Why are floppy disks still in use?
floppy disks or drive in English, they are still the data transfer method for many machines, even those released in the 2000s.
Wired cites some Boeing 747s, Boeing 767s, Airbus A320s and others as examples. floppy disks they are used to update your software.
Industrial machines also have diskette as the main data transfer method. The estimated time of use of many of them is at least a couple of decades longer, so for diskette really say goodbye
Other companies offer adapters that can convert the interface diskette To usb, but it depends on the device they will be installed on.
Floppy Dealer
Tom Persky of Floppydisk.com – Sales Specialist floppy disks He says that 20 or 25 years ago he could buy them for $0.07 each, and now he sells them for $1 each.
Much of Persky’s work is to find the set floppy disks for resale.
“There is a global list floppy disks which were made 10, 20 or 30 years ago. It’s fixed and we’re running out of it day by day. I have no idea how big it is. It’s probably gigantic, but it’s spread out. There is no person with half a million floppy disks, but there are half a million people with a pack of 10,” he explained.
Persky doesn’t think it will end floppy disks sell. He is 73 years old and plans to work for another five years and doesn’t think anyone is “dumb enough” to buy his company.
Source: RPP

I am Ben Stock, a passionate and experienced digital journalist working in the news industry. At the Buna Times, I write articles covering technology developments and related topics. I strive to provide reliable information that my readers can trust. My research skills are top-notch, as well as my ability to craft engaging stories on timely topics with clarity and accuracy.