Though the floppy disk was invented more than 50 years ago, it turns out airplanes continue to regularly use this archaic ...
Despite being obsolete in modern computing, the 3.5-inch floppy disk lives on globally as the universal "Save" icon in almost ...
Scientists have found a way to store all of humanity's most important data inside a piece of glass — and it could last longer than civilisation itself. View on euronews ...
Hard disks and magnetic tape have a limited lifespan, but storage developed by Microsoft could last for millennia ...
Discover 18 common household items everyone owned in the 90s that have completely vanished from our modern homes and why.
You may think donating old items helps give back, but they might be more of a burden than a benefit to the thrift store.
With AI buying up the worldwide supply of DRAM and hard drives, a wide swath of industries from automotive to cellular to PCs will face Armageddon times.
Not sure what today's NYT Connections answers are all about? Find out just what the different words in today's grid mean and how they fit together.
It feels like a cassette revival comes along every few years, and with the latest iteration in full swing, we were both startled and amused to see that at least one inventor is re-exploring the idea ...
Before the NES, home consoles were a burned market in the US. Nintendo reversed that narrative with games that turned consoles into a global industry again.
The main difference boils down to ownership versus access. When you buy a product, you own it. When you use a service, you’re paying for the right to use something, often for a set period, without ...
Borosilicate glass offers extreme stability; Microsoft’s accelerated aging experiments suggest the data would be stable for ...