After the graphics chip cooked itself for a second time, I’ve finally retired my 6 year old Acer and bought myself a new laptop. While deciding on the hardware configuration, one of the choices I had to make was what to put in the drive bays. A few years ago, it would have been very obvious that I wanted a DVD drive and a hard disk. Now however, Solid State drives look appealing as they become increasingly affordable. I couldn’t go for all three types of drive, as this particular laptop only has two bays.
So let’s weigh up what each drive offers:
SSD – fast! With windows installed on one of these a laptop boots in seconds.
HDD – still cheaper per gigabyte than an SSD and so more economical if you want large amounts of storage space.
DVD – required to load anything off a DVD or CD, obviously.
Ultimately it’s the DVD I decided to go without. This then is the first PC I’ve ever owned, without any sort of optical drive. It’s an odd feeling, like something fundamental is missing. CD-ROM drives were standard features in PCs over twenty years ago. DVD drives became commonplace in the 2000s. Now I have nowhere to insert one of those familiar shiny disks. I had to ask myself, though, how often do I actually need to do that? So much of our software and media comes over the internet these days. I can count on one hand the number of games I bought on physical disks in the past 5 years, and movies are so easy to get via Google Play (or your service of choice). I have another PC (desktop) for when I need to read off a disk, and I can make ISOs to put on the laptop if required.
Optical discs aren’t dead yet. We do however seem to be in the age of their long, slow decline. It does seem like an inefficient process, for the publisher to copy data to a little physical item, that the buyer then copies onto their own process. Surely better just to sent stuff directly over that one big network we call the internet. Times change, and being a PC user isn’t what it was in the 90s, or even the 2000s. We’ll just have to accept that, even if we at FFG towers use that latest technology to run 20 year old games.
It’s a bit of a self-indulgent joke for nerds in their 30s and upwards to point at a floppy disk and comment about modern teenagers not having a clue what that is. I wonder if in 10 years time we’ll be saying the same about CDs. Or maybe they’ll dimly remember Blu-rays as the last gasp of the optical disc, something their parents used before finally moving over to streaming everything off online services.
“I wonder if in 10 years time we’ll be saying the same about CDs. ”
No because CDs are still used in music and won’t go anywhere. Floppys died out because they became outdated and too small to be of any use. CD’s for music are still a thing, despite what maybe americans believe. CD-R’s are also still used by independent musicians
(Also personally i hope that one day people wake up and see that MP3 is complete crap and return to something that doesn’t make music sound like shit on anything above 30€ PC Speakers)
Also i doubt that storage mediums die out completely. Companies might talk about going “Online distribution only” but forget that not all people have a good enough internet connection, even people in western countries may have a slow connection or a cap on how much they’re allowed to download and over the past years a lot of ISP’s talked about limiting the download capabilities per customer. This combined with the fact that games get bigger and bigger may force the industry to go back to Blu-Ray or whatever follows afterwards. We already have 50+ GB Games like NBA 2K15 and GTA V (At least the PC Version wants 60 GB on the HDD) which are quite a pain to download.
March 17, 2015 @ 1:38 pm
Well 10 years might be too short a timeframe. I think roughly half musical purchases here in the UK are still on CD.
I admit I’m writing from an assumption that fast internet connections continue to become more commonplace (and even faster) and there’s not some massive backward step in our ability to download data.
That said I had no idea games had gotten so huge now.
March 17, 2015 @ 2:18 pm