The Weirdest Disks Ever

Ғылым және технология

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Optical discs aren't all CDs and DVDs! Learn about some cool disks of the past.
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Пікірлер: 949

  • @techquickie
    @techquickie Жыл бұрын

    Boost your productivity with the help of Grammarly and its tone suggestions! Sign up for an account and get 20% off Grammarly Premium: grammarly.com/techquickie

  • @DegustoDelSol

    @DegustoDelSol

    Жыл бұрын

    NOPE, i prefer to ask chatGPT for corrections and suggestions :) is much more fun

  • @yevgeniyvalstion7467

    @yevgeniyvalstion7467

    Жыл бұрын

    Владимир, мы большой радость в связи с интернациональность нашего 社区. В следующих смех картинка учитывать перевод для простой рабочий Lin Yung провинция Фуцзянь. Много удар! 👊

  • @yevgeniyvalstion7467

    @yevgeniyvalstion7467

    Жыл бұрын

    Миска риса за наш счёт!

  • @Nobe_Oddy

    @Nobe_Oddy

    Жыл бұрын

    YES!!! Moar weird and obscure disks!! Actually MOAR WEIRD AND OBSCURE EVERYTHING!!! I love this kind of stuff!!! Weird tech is AMAZING!!! - I hope you can do a video on the OPTICAL RECORD!!! (you might know it as the video record, or video on vinyl) lol The YT channel 'Technology Connections' did a who series on it and he dove REALLY DEEP into it.. but you guys could a 5 min video on just that... an occasional deep dive into the really strange formats are, I think, a GREAT IDEA.... maybe do your first series (I think) on weird storage formats... with most of them doing the overview of a few of them, but then once in a while dedicate an entire episode to one really interesting one... like video on vinyl (I'm starting toi think that maybe it wasn't an optical format.. I forget tbh lol... and I REALLY don't want watch Technology Connections' series all over again lol) - I think this channel has GREAT POTENTIAL that you guys just don't use all that much.... oh m,an I would LOVE to be able to give you guys my ideas for 5 minute videos :)

  • @10siWhiz

    @10siWhiz

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey do a vid on Microdrive cf2 cards. I know you know exactly what they are and why theyre cool.

  • @HaroldKuilman
    @HaroldKuilman Жыл бұрын

    Ofcourse we want more wierd media formats hosted by Anthony 👍🏻

  • @Lianpe98

    @Lianpe98

    Жыл бұрын

    yes please

  • @laupoke

    @laupoke

    Жыл бұрын

    We get it, you love Anthony. Stop polluting the comment section now, it feels like this has been going on for 5 years

  • @HaroldKuilman

    @HaroldKuilman

    Жыл бұрын

    @@laupoke it's my first time commenting something like this, so leave me alone with your complaints 🙏

  • @GamIngDoge.

    @GamIngDoge.

    Жыл бұрын

    @@HaroldKuilman good point, but please, do not continue it.

  • @somebodyirrelevant141

    @somebodyirrelevant141

    Жыл бұрын

    YES YES we need more

  • @ora2j251
    @ora2j251 Жыл бұрын

    For those wondering, sega consoles could read CD+G because the karaoke buisness is BIG in Japan, and so it made sense for them to include the functionality in their CD based consoles.

  • @Patrick2480

    @Patrick2480

    Жыл бұрын

    Sega even had a Karaoke add on w/ microphone included for the Mega CD (Sega CD) in Japan only.

  • @Patrick2480

    @Patrick2480

    Жыл бұрын

    PC Engine CD Rom/Duo/PC FX, 3DO. FTowns Marty as well

  • @Vitosi4ek1

    @Vitosi4ek1

    Жыл бұрын

    And IIRC, that functionality was the entry point for breaking copy protection on the Dreamcast. Sega went as far as develop their own disc standard (GD-ROM) to store games, and remembered to protect the audio CD mode, but seemingly forgot about the karaoke format.

  • @Liam3072

    @Liam3072

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Vitosi4ek1 It wasn't the CD+G standard that served as the backdoor to pirated CDs, but the mil-CD standard, a new interactive audio CD proprietary format that only got a handful of releases, in Japan only. It offered more than just graphics (it could do full motion video, online capabilities, interactive menus etc.)

  • @Chuck_vs._The_Comment_Section

    @Chuck_vs._The_Comment_Section

    Жыл бұрын

    No really? Asians are into karaoke? No one could expect that!

  • @firestar3x
    @firestar3x Жыл бұрын

    Anthony is such a fantastic presenter, love it when he does content like this.

  • @danimayb

    @danimayb

    Жыл бұрын

    I think not enough credit is given to Linus for the way he built his company and gathered his talented staff... Some of whom have become front faces we all love to see.

  • @laupoke

    @laupoke

    Жыл бұрын

    We get it, you love Anthony. Stop polluting the comment section now, it feels like this has been going on for 5 years

  • @Xerazal

    @Xerazal

    Жыл бұрын

    @@laupoke how is it polluting the comments by complimenting someone that's come a long way? When Anthony first started presenting videos, you could tell it wasn't his thing. He came off as kind of awkward and unsure of himself. Look at him now, there's a level of confidence in the way he speaks and presents. That should be applauded

  • @JordanHarris

    @JordanHarris

    Жыл бұрын

    I wish he was on camera less. He has a face for radio.

  • @O_Kotek

    @O_Kotek

    Жыл бұрын

    Only his voice could be ok

  • @Marco_Onyxheart
    @Marco_Onyxheart Жыл бұрын

    Old GameCube disks are actually mini DVDs. I've still got some empty disks just to burn some GameCube games using a regular DVD writer.

  • @iWhacko

    @iWhacko

    Жыл бұрын

    yes they are, they just had their index on the outer track, and all files that require quick read, because the outer tracks spin faster. thats why you need a modchip, because a dvd writer would write that on the inner tracks

  • @katrinabryce
    @katrinabryce Жыл бұрын

    I think the main reason why floptical disks never really took off was because the drives were really expensive. I worked in a computer supplies shop at the time. We sold the disks, and people would ask how much it cost for a drive that would take them. When they found it it cost about £650 (equivalent to £1250 today), they lost interest in the idea.

  • @dj1NM3

    @dj1NM3

    Жыл бұрын

    Killed by sticker-shock: The fact that the physical appearance floptical discs was very reminiscent of dirt-cheap HD floppy discs made that price difference an almost impossible sell.

  • @dmitrykazakov2829

    @dmitrykazakov2829

    Жыл бұрын

    Beggars! LTO tape drives start at 5K, carefully designed not to support old tapes! 😂

  • @greggmacdonald9644

    @greggmacdonald9644

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup, this. I knew about these optical options at the time and would have loved to get one for my home PC, but the cost of the drives and the media itself were what stopped me. I ended up with a Zip drive instead.

  • @OhhCrapGuy
    @OhhCrapGuy Жыл бұрын

    Fun fact, the 3.5" floppy was called a floppy because it was effectively a miniaturization of the old 5.25" and 8" actually floppy disks, and even the actual 3.5" disc itself was floppy inside of the external case we are all more familiar with.

  • @tonyelsom6382

    @tonyelsom6382

    Жыл бұрын

    We called it a stiffy.. 😂

  • Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, "it wasn't actually floppy" was wrong, the *disk* was floppy… the case wasn't.

  • @tareskisloki8579

    @tareskisloki8579

    Жыл бұрын

    Despite the confusion with the HDD, I always referred to them as hard disks, because I'd grown up using the actually floppy 5.25's.

  • @iWhacko

    @iWhacko

    Жыл бұрын

    no the 3.5 are called a diskette. not a floppy, and was not a miniaturisation, it's a completely different mechanism, apart from them both being magnetic disks.

  • @LogiForce86

    @LogiForce86

    Жыл бұрын

    Disagree, the diskette was always a diskette and never a floppy. Floppy was just a name the common folk got used to from indeed the 5,25" and 8" floppy disc era, but a definite misnomer by the ignorant and foolish non-techies. The same thing happened with the terms hacker and cracker. A hacker is someone that hacks up hardware to utilize it very differently than intended. A cracked is someone who cracks the security of software to gain entry. Yet common folk, especially morrons on the news, tend to use the term hacker for what is supposed to be a cracker. Just like they used the term floppy for a diskette.

  • @JosephDickson
    @JosephDickson Жыл бұрын

    I used an Iomega Zip in college. They were fragile as well and intended for storage only. However, users frequently ran files off the zip disk directly when actively working. This led to "the click of death" and Zip became the poster child of the phrase.

  • @Mr.Morden

    @Mr.Morden

    Жыл бұрын

    I had a bunch of Jaz drives in college, basically a hard drive with removable platters. They were expensive but they were reliable, never had one go out on me.

  • @nickkk420

    @nickkk420

    Жыл бұрын

    I duno if I'm remembering wrong, but also remember the getting super hot

  • @tacticalcenter8658

    @tacticalcenter8658

    Жыл бұрын

    I didn't have any issues with my zip drives. Took them too and fro school in they were thrown around a lot.

  • @tjb_altf4

    @tjb_altf4

    Жыл бұрын

    we used superdisks in my high school CAD class, 10x more fragile than zips as they were the same form factor as normal 3.5" floppys

  • @dj1NM3

    @dj1NM3

    Жыл бұрын

    Zip drives never lived up to their promise because of that fragility: it's not like you *expected* your disc and/or drive to be "committing suicide" just by being used.

  • @eh5806
    @eh5806 Жыл бұрын

    Only disappointed LS120 wasn't mentioned, which I thought was going to be the successor to floppy and bought into. Still got a few disks around and looking for a drive to see if they're still readable.

  • @markrathgeber9858

    @markrathgeber9858

    Жыл бұрын

    I mean superdisk was basically the same technology as floptical afaik, just higher capacity.

  • @eh5806

    @eh5806

    Жыл бұрын

    @@markrathgeber9858 Fair enough.

  • @RAMII19780529

    @RAMII19780529

    Жыл бұрын

    I used LS120s too! I thought that was going to be the new standard.

  • @blooddiamond5396

    @blooddiamond5396

    Жыл бұрын

    we still use LS120s in my office. IDE adapters galore but you can't beat em for all around backwards compatibility . they need to start making them again. they are perfect for flashing the BIOS and older applications that demand a floppy but forgot the actual size of a floppy.

  • @edgarwalk5637

    @edgarwalk5637

    Жыл бұрын

    @@blooddiamond5396 Wow, I had a friend with an LS-120, but I haven't seen it for a quarter of a century.

  • @Tn2dc24eva
    @Tn2dc24eva Жыл бұрын

    Anthony is the best. Amazing presenter and such a clear and powerful voice

  • @londongaz2
    @londongaz2 Жыл бұрын

    Yes, more weird ancient tech please!

  • @Sad_King_Billy

    @Sad_King_Billy

    Жыл бұрын

    I was there Gandalf. I was there 3,000 years ago.

  • @thestig007
    @thestig007 Жыл бұрын

    I remember getting my first CD burner. It was $100 and very slow. But I could finally burn my own music to CD to listen on my portable CD player!

  • @mattsword41

    @mattsword41

    Жыл бұрын

    same - no buffer underrun protection either - if another program started doing heavy HDD access, drive lost the data stream and you got a coaster

  • @beetooex

    @beetooex

    Жыл бұрын

    I had to wait to be given a hand-me-down burner. By this point some personal CD players could read WMA files so I could get loads of albums onto one disc at 128kbps! 😂😂😂 My whole music collection was pirated off borrowed CDs ripped in Windows Media Player. So young and dumb lol.

  • @leechap3

    @leechap3

    Жыл бұрын

    I paid $300 for mine, I was an early adopter. The blank disks were super expensive too.

  • @gblargg

    @gblargg

    Жыл бұрын

    I used to record video game music on cassette tapes. When I had access to a CD burner in 1996, I was floored. I hooked the consoles to the PC and made CD-quality recordings and my own video game music audio CDs. This was when CD-Rs cost $10 each and had actual gold plating. Those CDs still work to this day.

  • @jayhom5385

    @jayhom5385

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mattsword41 I remember I had a junk one and one of my friends had just come back from store with a game he bought. I was going to put it in to my computer, but I snuck the CDR on top, pretended to stumble and drop the disk. I stepped on it perfectly and the metal flaked off all over the place. The look on his face was priceless.

  • @Starfals
    @Starfals Жыл бұрын

    Anthony is really good at this. I still remember his first time. He never disappointed, if anything.. i prefer him over everyone else now LOL.

  • @MalcomTidus
    @MalcomTidus Жыл бұрын

    More obscure formats please. I also want to hear about HD-DVD's failure to beat Blu-ray

  • @matthewlozy1140

    @matthewlozy1140

    Жыл бұрын

    That'll be a 5 second video. It lost simply because Sony included a Blu-Ray player in the PS3. The PS3 was cheaper than standalone blu ray players at the time, so it was a no brainer. Easy market share boost.

  • @KillerKermie

    @KillerKermie

    Жыл бұрын

    I would actually like a deep dive on that. There was so much buzz in the day regarding this, the Microsoft vs Sony battle would be a good segment.

  • @pieterpohl1991
    @pieterpohl1991 Жыл бұрын

    In South Africa we called 3 1/4 inch disks "stiffy disks". Floppy was reserved to the larger, actually floppy disks.

  • @DecanFrost
    @DecanFrost Жыл бұрын

    i freaking loved my mini-disk walkman. i ran that thing 24/7, copying and mixing at night, running all day, with on-the-fly editing and moving tracks around.

  • @XSpImmaLion
    @XSpImmaLion Жыл бұрын

    Techmoan has me covered, thanks. xD No, but seriously, always nice to see quick takes from Anthony. Not being from a developed nation, it's always interesting to see all the throngs of media tech that we never got here from the US, but particularly the throngs of stuff that didn't transfer from Asia to the West well due to cultural differences and whatnot.

  • @hixe
    @hixe Жыл бұрын

    Anthony is the friend I want but can't reach. Love to see him doing episodes!

  • @RobVicRJ
    @RobVicRJ Жыл бұрын

    I remember coming back from school watching movies inside the bus on my way home with PSP. It was really ahead of its time, because most people had only music players

  • @nekomasteryoutube3232
    @nekomasteryoutube3232 Жыл бұрын

    Yes I'd always like more weird media of the past, especially because Anthony seems to know his stuff.

  • @doodskie999
    @doodskie999 Жыл бұрын

    Man, the early 2000's was great, burning our own discs, sharing music with friends, buying a whole bottle of cd and cd laser cleaner, then the ipod happened lol

  • @ravencorvus7903
    @ravencorvus7903 Жыл бұрын

    We always want more of this stuff Anthony!

  • @Pjollemannen
    @Pjollemannen Жыл бұрын

    I was really early into the minidisc, it was soooo nice when it came out as a portable music-player. Was dreaming about minidiscs entering the PC-world, still think thats a missed opportunity. Heck it could've probably still be viable today, the size of a minidisc competes with a USB-stick imho and with todays blueray-tech and beyond the could probably fit alot of capacity in that format of a disc

  • @onlysublime
    @onlysublime Жыл бұрын

    actually, 3.5" floppy disks were floppy as they were made of the same material as the 5.25" disks but only with a hard shell to protect it. I remember my friends calling them "hard disks" when they first came out. because they didn't know that hard disks referred to the hard disk drives with metal platters.

  • @happy2bhardcore420
    @happy2bhardcore420 Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see you cover Minidisks, and all the variants of length and data that came out

  • @DJNightKat
    @DJNightKat Жыл бұрын

    I’d love to see more vids in obscure formats. Like who remembers SuperDisk. That’s what I thought this was going to be about. That was an odd little format that did 120MB on something that looked like a floppy. But appeartly it did that at the same speed as floppy.

  • @ChristopherMainland

    @ChristopherMainland

    Жыл бұрын

    When I went to Uni in the late 90s all the lab PCs had SuperDisk, super handy to have that one disk that had all my course work on it

  • @fredhurst2528
    @fredhurst2528 Жыл бұрын

    I worked at a 3M factory that made magneto-optical disks, basically loaded/unloaded substrates into the coating machine. I think they sold them to companies as file back-ups. The factory did not last long.

  • @thseed7
    @thseed7 Жыл бұрын

    I love these dives into the tech of the past. The laser disc mentioned made me remember the high school TV cart and record sized discs that I always had to help my teachers figure out how to operate.

  • @huntingnomad
    @huntingnomad Жыл бұрын

    We need computer and game history videos. This one was great!

  • @tor-ivarhassfjord
    @tor-ivarhassfjord Жыл бұрын

    Always want to see more content with Anthony ☺️

  • @InfectiousGroovePodcast
    @InfectiousGroovePodcast Жыл бұрын

    The mid 90s through the early 2000s was such a wild west for storage mediums. I worked in big box retail at the time and seemed like every week we were getting new drives or disks of some sort. I like the ones you covered in this video and YES, we would love more videos on weird storage formats!

  • @dethmunky86
    @dethmunky86 Жыл бұрын

    The first computer I built was an original AMD Athlon 800MHz, and I had bought a SuperDisk drive for it because I wanted my PC to be truly next-gen. I thought Super Disks would be bigger than Zip disks because they ran on the IDE bus and were way faster, and they still supported traditional floppy disks. It actually read floppy disks way faster, too.

  • @Yvo19
    @Yvo19 Жыл бұрын

    This dude has charisma gushing out of ever pore. If he did a video about his last s**t, i'd probably watch it.

  • @sturdybutter
    @sturdybutter Жыл бұрын

    You guys should do a video on memory latency timings and which of the 4 numbers given matter the most and how they correspond to the RAM’s performance. If you haven’t already that is.

  • @SVPunk619
    @SVPunk619 Жыл бұрын

    I remember an article years ago about a company working on a cd+rw that was made from some sort of stone. It was being developed as to not suffer from cd rot. I never heard about it again, so I don't know if it didn't work or if the company ran out of funds, or what. I always wondered though.

  • @davenz000
    @davenz000 Жыл бұрын

    The 8 Bit Guy did a great video on "108 Rare and Bizarre Media Types" worth a look.

  • @petervenkman69
    @petervenkman69 Жыл бұрын

    Anthony, you are very knowledgeable, and so I am sure you know this, and I wish rather than perpetuating the myth you had actually explained it... 3.5" floppy discs were floppy, it is simply the cases they were in were rigid. Over the years (mostly back when they were relevant) I destroyed so many 3.5" floppies to demonstrate why they were called floppies... fortunately no one ever asked me to destroy a hard drive to show the difference. The fact that high density floppies said "HD" on them didn't help as many people during the 5 1/4" / 3.5" crossover period described the 3.5" floppies as hard discs didn't help... most people didn't have hard drives back then.

  • @sanketgurung917
    @sanketgurung917 Жыл бұрын

    Please tell me I wasn’t the only one that read the video title wrong 😂😂😂😂

  • @bigkingextra

    @bigkingextra

    Жыл бұрын

    LOL

  • @alexthemorgan

    @alexthemorgan

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, if you are reading dicks in titles, thats more telling about you than anything. #freudian

  • @Ishan_Singla

    @Ishan_Singla

    Жыл бұрын

    Same

  • @steveneger8819

    @steveneger8819

    Жыл бұрын

    Gross lol

  • @mr.g-sez

    @mr.g-sez

    Жыл бұрын

    lol 🤦‍♂️

  • @bladactania
    @bladactania Жыл бұрын

    Definitely want more videos like this one! Love Anthony taking us on a trip down memory lane.

  • @answer834
    @answer834 Жыл бұрын

    It's time to utilise this digital units with the option accepting diversity in the digital space. Like i'm already involved with a digital assured passive process with the assitance of qn authority, making it my choice to rely on there instagram insights

  • @answer834

    @answer834

    Жыл бұрын

    @ king.arobertson

  • @Ayrshore
    @Ayrshore Жыл бұрын

    Other than ignoring the 2.88Mb floppy, and including a Mac with a 400K floppy drive in the four pictured systems behind the "1.44mb had become standard" bit, this was excellent. More please.

  • @jorceshaman
    @jorceshaman Жыл бұрын

    I'd love to see a Technology Connections collab. Maybe him and Anthony? That would be fun.

  • @pernilsson2394
    @pernilsson2394 Жыл бұрын

    It would be a great if you did a historical video on computer storage. Anthony is clearly the best presenter on this more technical focused/documentrary focused content. To be honest i would love to see more serious/longer documentraries from you guys.

  • @PS_Tube
    @PS_Tube Жыл бұрын

    Love these obscure / interesting tech videos hosted by Anthony. Please do more of such.

  • @drdarkeny
    @drdarkeny Жыл бұрын

    Your mentioning zip drives reminded me - have you ever done an episode on what they actually were, why they took the market by storm and why they faded out so quick? Also, how much talking about SyQuest drives, which were at one time the biggest drive you could carry around?

  • @grahamwilliamson5306
    @grahamwilliamson5306 Жыл бұрын

    Weird tech stuff from bygone eras are always cool to watch.

  • @Adam-jw3uz
    @Adam-jw3uz Жыл бұрын

    I know technology connections already had his rant video on them, but I'd to hear Anthony's take on flexplay DVDs, the failed attempt at a disposable rental disc.

  • @jeffleonard343
    @jeffleonard343 Жыл бұрын

    3:17 LMAO that email in Grammarly ad!

  • @tcholmes2237
    @tcholmes2237 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Anthony - perfect! Just the right length and amount of information for my interest level In this old obscure stuff.. I would be happy to watch more like this.

  • @GoldenSun5631
    @GoldenSun5631 Жыл бұрын

    I remember having my mind blown after getting my first portable CD player that could also playback CD-R and CD-RW discs! Some of my fondest memories are from listening to music from my home made music CDs during school bus rides :-) Also remember getting a minidisk player, though those were a little weird to use (came with a sub-par program that could automatically "recorded" music CDs to minidisks but that only worked some of the times) and the minidisks themselves were kind of expensive, so my parents only got me like 2-3 disks and that was that.

  • @rocb7580
    @rocb7580 Жыл бұрын

    Brings back memories. Especially since I found a grassroots controller and floptical drive alongside a 250mb zip drive while cleaning out my basement a few days ago.

  • @daftrok
    @daftrok Жыл бұрын

    Honestly if UMD movies were half the price it would have done so much better. We already had portable DVD players with larger sharper screens for cheap at that point.

  • @r.j.bedore9884
    @r.j.bedore9884 Жыл бұрын

    Another cool floppy disk competitor was the LS-120 drive, which used special 3.5 inch floppy disks that held 120MB. The drive was also backwards compatible with standard 1.44MB disks. It didn't take off though, as people started using USB flash drives about the same time it came to market.

  • @SinLord101
    @SinLord101 Жыл бұрын

    Anthony's outro gestures with "like/dislike, comment video suggestion down bellow" made me see in him a Flight Attendant telling us the security procedures of the airplane before liftoff

  • @joshhuggins
    @joshhuggins Жыл бұрын

    Yup, dig these old format / device vids. Fun reminders of the past!

  • @TovarasSanders
    @TovarasSanders Жыл бұрын

    thank you guys for giving us more of Anthony! He is amazing, seems like a great human and his tech knowledge is fantastic!!! Rock on Anthony!!!

  • @darkwaveatheist
    @darkwaveatheist Жыл бұрын

    I remember seeing ads for Floptical drives in various Atari ST magazines. I believe they were briefly popular with DTP companies. Just one of those technologies got eclipsed sooner than anyone thought at the time.

  • @KojiKazama
    @KojiKazama Жыл бұрын

    Amongst my friends we used to call the 3.5 inch disk "stiffy disks".

  • @bgezal
    @bgezal Жыл бұрын

    0:34 3.5" floppys were indeed floppy media. Open up the cover and see.

  • @nizm0man
    @nizm0man Жыл бұрын

    I once worked on a Kodak optical disc storage library in a data centre. The cartridges were weird CD in a case type things. There was also a more regular looking CD (or possibly DVD) based library next to it.

  • @RetroMario
    @RetroMario Жыл бұрын

    Another weird optical format, that also involves SEGA is the GD-Rom. It's a proprietary disk that can hold up to 1GB of data and only got used on Dreamcast, NAOMI and TRIFORCE arcade cabinets. The Mil-CD format that's essentially GD-Rom with CD-Rom readable sectors, was actually the weakness that defeated the Dreamcast's security.

  • @bland9876
    @bland9876 Жыл бұрын

    I'm surprised that since blue ray can hold so much data we don't just use GameCube sized blue ray discs for everything.

  • @little-wytch
    @little-wytch Жыл бұрын

    I never heard of the Floptical before, but I did have an LS120 drive. It was magneto-optical and held 120 MB, so it was even better than zip-drives and an LS120 drive could also read/write standard floppies too.

  • @casbalti
    @casbalti Жыл бұрын

    Yes yes yes, more please! Love these little bite sized videos of tech history!

  • @NULUSIOS
    @NULUSIOS Жыл бұрын

    It's a bit sad but I remember all of them and some more... the 120MB floppies (also compatible with normal floppies, I remember some Compaq workstations had them), 2.88MB ED disks, MO disks (bigger than ZIPs) etc.

  • @danibluray
    @danibluray Жыл бұрын

    The techsection I didn’t know it was missed from my life. Awesome :) thank you.

  • @randallamik3230
    @randallamik3230 Жыл бұрын

    I had a Panasonic camera that used ls-120 disks 120mb on a dusk that looks like a standard floppy. I also had an LS-120 drive in my computer. Looked like a floppy drive, but was IDE connection

  • @linuxfabrication9074
    @linuxfabrication9074 Жыл бұрын

    I used *LS-120 disks* as they were nearly same size as 1.44 disks but held *120mb* installed into a PC the drive itself could also read normal disks.

  • @Akirajds
    @Akirajds Жыл бұрын

    That grammarly ad was awesome

  • @ccvideotech
    @ccvideotech Жыл бұрын

    I actually assumed it was a floppy until about 0:45. Don't remember these at all. Great video!

  • @ryankohnenkamp8946
    @ryankohnenkamp8946 Жыл бұрын

    3:48 Every disk ever made can be the size of a cookie, if you're hungry enough...

  • @elbaecc
    @elbaecc Жыл бұрын

    PSA, Technology Connections covered a lot of weird disc formats in a series of videos on his channel.

  • @dalesnell6286
    @dalesnell6286 Жыл бұрын

    This was fun. A couple of those media formats I'd never heard of before. One you missed was the CD-RAM. A cross-breed of sorts of a regular disk, but on optical media.

  • @stompsalot
    @stompsalot Жыл бұрын

    yes, yes! would absolutely love more content featuring deprecated storage formats, interfaces, protocols, etc 😃

  • @yoyobah1862
    @yoyobah1862 Жыл бұрын

    It's amazing how quickly we went from floppy to digital after decades of 5 1/4 and 3 1/2 and even larger floppy media, now even physical storage is becoming outdated, I'd like to see what large spindle tape media is still being used.

  • @barkvarkie_fpv8623
    @barkvarkie_fpv8623 Жыл бұрын

    Those 1.44MB "floppies" were actually known as "stiffies" in my day? The true floppies were just that, floppie and held only 640MB or something silly like that. The drive had a "door".

  • @MrGrislyTooth
    @MrGrislyTooth Жыл бұрын

    I’d like to see a history of the floppy disk, so many childhood memories pitching those plastic pucks in the front yard with my dad when he got a DVD-RW drive. Ah memories.

  • @rel1c5
    @rel1c5 Жыл бұрын

    Awesome video! Anthony is my favorite by far! knowledgeable and he adds excitement to a topic others would make less interesting. He could even re do relevant videos others have presented, hosted or narrated and theyd be significantly better. im sure more veiws as well! Linus can make a video entertaining for sure but Anthony gives the life to a video where it can be watched to the end. keep up the great work!!

  • @lol-xx9kn
    @lol-xx9kn Жыл бұрын

    Also another reason for UMD's death: they were always falling apart. I have around 5 physical UMDs still and every single one of them: the top clear top came off. It still functions, but it was not designed for longevity.

  • @janneaalto3956
    @janneaalto3956 Жыл бұрын

    I remember computer magazines writing articles about the Floptical. From what I remember, most seemed more excited about that than about the ZIP drive. Even more so after the ZIP head contagion had been confirmed. Though, having lost a few important files because of ZIP discs, I may be biased.

  • @Siddif
    @Siddif Жыл бұрын

    Even though I knew of about half of these, there’s something in the way Anthony tells them that makes it so entertaining to watch. The kind of person who could read a dictionary and still have it be interesting.

  • @DraaelD
    @DraaelD Жыл бұрын

    Always a pleasure being informed by Anthony. Great stuff.

  • @sereusalpha2758
    @sereusalpha2758 Жыл бұрын

    Tech history with Anthony has become one of my favorite segments of this channel

  • @n3ologicprojects351
    @n3ologicprojects351 Жыл бұрын

    Imation Corp. created the LS-120 in 1996. it was based on the original 1.44MB floppy technology but could be formatted at 120MB. There was a big push for these back in the late 90s but short lived due to the CD-RW showing it up in almost every way. It was better at file deletion though since you had to either lose the space in a CD-RW or format it to recover the space. It seemed like a pretty big deal to me at the time but I didn’t know anyone else who had one.

  • @MDK69420
    @MDK69420 Жыл бұрын

    I definitely read the KZread notification wrong

  • @randomsandwichian
    @randomsandwichian Жыл бұрын

    I actually was passed one of those old computers with the 5¼ floppy that might still be around in the old home. Used to rock the few games that they got together, one of which is the OG Sokoban. Good times.

  • @TheBullDurham
    @TheBullDurham Жыл бұрын

    Many music CDs had computer media content on them (Music videos and behind the scenes content) but for some reason they only work on old Macs now. Like the Barenaked Ladies - Shoebox E.P.

  • @michaelhanson5773
    @michaelhanson5773 Жыл бұрын

    When you said toward the end about a format that died really quickly but had a lot of money put into it, i immediately thought of HD-DVD that microsoft and some others backed and they even made the add-on drive for the xbox 360.

  • @moderniselife
    @moderniselife Жыл бұрын

    Anthony is probably my favourite host on any of LTT's channels.

  • @AzraelSWFC2011
    @AzraelSWFC2011 Жыл бұрын

    "Laserdisc, like you might have used in School".... I feel 100% attacked right now... I had a laserdisc player in my living room....

  • @Fizz-Pop
    @Fizz-Pop Жыл бұрын

    Floppy Disks were floppy if you took them out of their plastic enclosure.

  • @skodbolle
    @skodbolle Жыл бұрын

    I loved the LS120 drives back in the day, compatible with old floppy discs and and 120MB storage and for the time it was very fast R/W speeds

  • @EricMason0321
    @EricMason0321 Жыл бұрын

    I used Imation SuperDisks in the late 90's. 120MB storage and the drive was backwards compatible with standard 1.44MB floppy disks.

  • @WahooNo2
    @WahooNo2 Жыл бұрын

    Around 2001 I used a floppy converter by Olympus for data. It went in a normal floppy drive and would write to a 128mb SD card. I think the original idea was to use it in the first floppy based digital cameras but I used it for data.

  • @henryca03
    @henryca03 Жыл бұрын

    Another thing about UMDs is that they're fragile AF. Over time, the shell surrounding the disc will separate, and the disc won't work without that shell. Thus, that created a market for replacement UMD shells

  • @robertsondunn
    @robertsondunn Жыл бұрын

    History is awash with discs/disks that never gained widespread use. Like seriously, the more you dive in the more you can see just how crazy things were. Also, I want to point out that Sony messed up with UMD. If they had opened up the format a bit to let third parties build UMD video players we might have seen the format seriously compete with DVDs. Although the capacity was much smaller than DVD, the video codecs were far more mature. Those tiny discs were so portable.

  • @ZiggyMercury
    @ZiggyMercury Жыл бұрын

    Yes, absolutely! And, more weird tech stuff from the past in general!

  • @defineDeviation
    @defineDeviation Жыл бұрын

    I like the little touch like Anthony wearing hard drive shirt while hosting for TechQuickie episode about storage devices :D

  • @SingleRacerSVR
    @SingleRacerSVR Жыл бұрын

    VIDEO SUGGESTION? - Our family has always argued that if you took "insert Random Song ABC" and played it on a standard CD. We always argued that the same exact song then played in a MOVIE SOUNDTRACK, played on the exact same gear that you might have played the CD on. always seemed to sound better & more vibrant(?). So could you talk a bit about why there is no such thing as Blu-Ray Music - or at least CD's with the same level of detail than a brilliant sounding song, when played on any decent Movie Soundtrack?

  • @maximal10
    @maximal10 Жыл бұрын

    only realized now that the Grammarly spot had a letter to Colton in it... LD's were soo much fun to use, chapter selection by a tethered barcode scanner that still used a battery for power...flipping the disc, and if it had issues reading the disc, flipping off the machine. Still I've seen the LD movies and love the art they have used, better than VHS/DVDs sometimes

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