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What nostalgic thing do you think should stay in the past?
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DVDs too. If I never burn another DVD again, that will be A-OK with me. I hate having to babysit those. Give me a hard drive, USB, or server to move data all day.
Burning DVDs was really a thing there for a hot minute. I remember buying them in big spindles of 50 at a time, and burning at least two or three a week.
Back then I already had my first ever USB flash drive, but they were still very expensive and small - 128MB was great for some documents, but no good for large files. And my PC's hard drive was still only about 120GB or something.
DVDs were in their element. 4.7GBs of storage, and super cheap. I was using them to back up data and clear apace on my hard drive, and I was loading them up with content for friends, where I could just take a disc over their house and leave it there for them.
Then flash drives got bigger, and hard drives got bigger too, and that sweet spot the DVD occupied got squashed from both sides until poof, in just a few short years the age of the DVD was over.
... I still have probably 100 blank DVDs and a hundred blank CDs.
But I also have a 3.5" floppy drive so I'm not a good measure to go by on these things.
I don't doubt it exists, but I'm kind of curious about workflows that still involve burning optical media in 2024.
The US military uses tapes for long term storage still
Tape is still the best long term storage medium though.
Secure networks have their head in their ass about flash media. So, discs.
Edit: For more technical reasons see what ReversalHatchery wrote further down
It sucks, trust me
Most healthcare systems are stuck in the old ways.
its still better in a sense. usb storage devices all have an internal "mini computer" that run their own code and have access to the USB bus of the connected computer, with the ability to even present themselves as a keyboard, a network adapter or a lot of other things. that's not a good idea to plug in to the hospital computer after it was given to the patient, and it is also not the best idea to just plug these in at home.
optical media on the other hand does not store code that is executed by the drive.
the problem is that pendrives have a firmware, and too much capabilities, even when not accounting for errors in hardware and code that participates in making it work. some of them (maybe most?) is even writable with the right tools, and the computer's user doesn't even need to know that it's happening.
the most famous web browser that allows any website access to your USB devices with just 1 or 2 clicks makes this even worse.