Posted on 10/21/2010 12:38:51 PM PDT by SunkenCiv
The iMac killed the floppy in 1998.
USB thumb drives can be made with ROM chips - can’t be erased either, and are less fragile than optical. This makes sense for software and restore disks.
BluRay is going to end up as the last rotating optical format.
Boy I wish I did, I'm still using Blu Ray Cave Drawings........
You are wrong my FRiend, you are actually on the vanguard. They are now selling USB record players to plug directly into your computer.
Unbelievable. I have one at home in the US that looks almost exactly like that. Have several dozen old records, too. And it still works!!!
The one I have that I play Francis Albert — and George Beverly Shea — on is actually a beautiful, modern replica of it.
Frint grille is the only thing different on mine.
I also have a new one that I plug into the laptop in order to digitize LPs.
Also, each time the chips have gotten faster, the OSes have been made bigger with more capabilities and frills, so the increased speed can barely be noticed. :’)
Even the chair is obsolete. ;’)
lol..perfect.
Your hex joke now joins the binary joke, "There are 10 kinds of people in the world. Those who understand binary and those who don't".
I wonder how many people even understood your joke?
Even worse, microSd cards are so darned small you can't even label the stupid things.
It's all about $....Force people to buy more stuff.
Not only that, but the need for methodical and comprehensive conversions from one media format to another is little understood in most quarters. Don't even talk to me about proprietary data formats.
i don't know, but I taught my daughters how to count in hex, binary and octal before they were 10 (dec) years old.
Apple, vastly overpriced, overhyped equipment that they own and dictate how you use it. I’ll keep tinkering and upgrading my Windows machine that I built for much much less that works much much better.
Oh, but, I don’t look all trendy
>> Apple products are needlessly expensive, not upgradeable and become obsolete, plus Apple controls what you have from the moment you buy it, and keep paying for it. Ill take my home built machines that run on Windows 7, or, if I like, Linux. I can buy parts, tinker with it, replace parts, and do what I want, and it costs sooo much less. But, I dont get to look trendy.........
>> 18 posted on Mon Oct 18 22:41:13 2010 by Sto Zvirat
As one home "tinkerer" to another:
Don't get me wrong -- you're certainly entitled to repeat yourself. But can you add to the conversation beyond that anti-Apple screed?
Tell ya what, I'll not repeat myself in your honor, but I'll direct you to the answer to your criticism, which you must have missed before because you didn't reply:
> 29 posted on Tue Oct 19 01:37:30 2010 by dayglored. Oh, and #30 also, in case you wonder who's pestering you. :)
Cheers!
I wouldn't know but high end electronics will serve you well.
As a youth I had one of the finest turntable stereo systems money can buy. It was a Klausenplay.
The thing about Apple is that it tends to be the first major OEM to do these things: drop floppies, drop CRT monitors, now drop optical media. The other OEMs usually follow within a decade. Apple can do this because it controls the platform and isn’t afraid to piss people off in order to advance the state of technology.
I have an 8 Terabyte Drobo that I rip all DVD's to, then play over my network. The next generation of Hard Disk drives will soon hold 10 terabytes per square inch. Small storage media devices are doomed, partly because of the tax imposed on the media by the media companies.
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