given the failure rates of old floppies and the speed at which they cost of buying them is increasing, it won’t be long before this is the cheaper solution. it’s an old, slow and inefficient technology which always was going to need to be transitioned away from and the article pitches it as a kind of crisis, but as these transitions go it seems like a fairly stable and successful one?
given the failure rates of old floppies and the speed at which they cost of buying them is increasing, it won’t be long before this is the cheaper solution. it’s an old, slow and inefficient technology which always was going to need to be transitioned away from and the article pitches it as a kind of crisis, but as these transitions go it seems like a fairly stable and successful one?