Return of the floppy!

Matsushita crams 32M onto a standard floppy
by Martyn Williams, IDG News Service - Tokyo Bureau
February 06, 2001, 03:03

The floppy disk could be about to make a come back. Matsushita Kotobuki Electronics Industries Ltd., better known by its Panasonic brand name, has announced the development of a new technology that can increase their capacity more than 20-fold.

The company will begin selling later this month a new disk drive that, it says, is capable of storing 32M bytes of data on a standard 2HD floppy disk -- some 22.2 times that of its usual 1.44M byte capacity. To increase the data capacity of a standard floppy, Matsushita's FD32MB system employs zone bit recording -- a system used to encode data onto hard disks and optical disc systems that more efficiently uses the space to record data.

The popularity of floppy disks, once king of the removable media market, has been waning in recent years as computers have increased in sophistication and users have found the floppy disks' capacity a limiting factor to their use. "With the FD32MB system, it enables people to find a use for all the floppies they had that they thought were useless," said Matsushita spokeswoman Yoko Fukusaki.

The new drive also boasts support for 120M byte and 240M byte versions of the SuperDisk format and doesn't need an external power supply. Instead, it is powered from the USB (Universal Serial Bus) port to which it connects.

Matsushita plans to put the drive on sale from February 23 in Japan. It is expected to cost less than 10,000 yen (US$87).

Matsushita Electric Industrial, in Osaka, can be contacted online at http://www.mei.co.jp/.



Note: Replies will be formatted with PHP Markdown Extra syntax.

Name: Email (Not Required):
 
Logged IP: 18.234.154.197
To prevent spam please submit by clicking the kitten: