Archive for the ‘Reviews’ Category

Sony gives floppy drives a death blow

Monday, April 26th, 2010

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.

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. Dell followed suit in 2003 when it dropped the floppy as standard equipment on one of its Dimension desktops.

I remember when the HDFD drives came out; I couldn’t afford to by a 10 pack of diskettes, they were $80.00 a box (a lot of money for a middle school kid). :ast time I purchased a pack of diskettes they were around $5.00. I guess it won’t be long before flash drives get to that price and they will be the media of choice (which is now DVD’s).

Don’t let Vendor Hype Take You Down the Wrong Road

Monday, February 15th, 2010

To identify the right CRM solutions for your business, you first need to understand what CRM is. Customer Relationship Management is a way of doing business and it requires a strategy from which you will define processes that can be supported by people and software.

Where most folks get it wrong is by confining CRM to the sales organization, or customer service or marketing. The fact is, each of those areas is a critical part of CRM and there could even be an impact in some of your back office groups as well. (more…)

Organic Electronics

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

Providing insight into a frustrating inconsistency in the performance of electronics made with organic materials, Stanford researchers have shown that the way boundaries between individual crystals in a film are aligned can make a 70-fold difference in how easily current, or electrical charges, can move through transistors. (more…)

Tilera Creates 100 Core Processor

Monday, October 26th, 2009

The two-year-old startup, has announced a series of CPUs that will feature up to 100 cores. The Tile-GX processors are being aimed at server markets that deal with web-related functions. The chips can run Linux, and can function as both a co-processor and a standalone. The Gx100 will draw an amazingly low 55 watts under full load, while the 16 core version will max around 5 watts. (more…)

A review of Linux Mint 7.0

Sunday, September 6th, 2009

The new Linux Mint is one of the best distributions I have yet seen for anyone interested in making the crossover from Windows to Linux.  Mint is based on Ubunto which is one of the most used distributions in the world. (more…)

The latest version of Knoppix

Friday, September 4th, 2009

The latest version of Knoppix represents a radical remake of the venerable Live CD Linux distribution. Knoppix 6.0 is leaner, faster, and more versatile than ever. In addition to that, the new version brings another significant improvement: the amazingly fast boot process. Even when Knoppix runs from a CD, it takes less than a minute to boot to the graphical desktop. (more…)