3.25" diskettes (was: Restore CDs, diagnostics etc.

From: Fred Cisin <cisin_at_xenosoft.com>
Date: Tue Sep 26 18:32:25 2000

On Tue, 26 Sep 2000, Don Maslin wrote:
> Fred, what does the 3.25" diskette look like, and what machine used it?

When "shirt pocket" diskettes came about, there was a lot of argument
about which one would win out. The computer press argued about which one
fit the pocket best, and the completely irrelevant issue of which ones
were actually best. George Morrow said that the solution was obvious:
cut a deal between the computer industry and the clothing industry to make
shirt pockets 5.25".

A number of companies went with 3", such as Amstradt, Amdek drives for
Apple and Coco, and even the early Gavilans.

Dysan, who almost controlled the diskette business did NOT want to retool
to make hard-shell cases, etc. So they came out with a miniature version
of a 5.25" diskette. It had a metal center hub, but was otherwise
constructed like a "normal" floppy.

But the big problem was how to get it accepted.

Dysan bet the company on a giant software publishing venture. They cut
deals with most of the big software companies to be able to distribute
most of the "major" software packages on 3.25" diskettes.

The theory was that whichever format had the software would become the
standard.
It didn't work.
The 3.5" won out.
Dysan survived, but no longer dominates the field.


The Seequa Chameleon 325 was the only machine that I'm aware of that went
with the 3.25". I would be very interested to know of any others.

I got my 3.25" drives at local swaps. A lot of my diskettes were
discarded by Micropro (Wordstar).

--
Fred Cisin                      cisin_at_xenosoft.com
XenoSoft                        http://www.xenosoft.com
PO Box 1236                     (510) 644-9366
Berkeley, CA 94701-1236
Received on Tue Sep 26 2000 - 18:32:25 BST

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