Culture Japan declares victory in effort to end government use of floppy disks


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Taro Kono speaks during a debate session held by Japan National Press Club September 18, 2021 in Tokyo, Japan.

TOKYO, July 3 (Reuters) - Japan's government has finally eliminated the use of floppy disks in all its systems, two decades since their heyday, reaching a long-awaited milestone in a campaign to modernise the bureaucracy.

By the middle of last month, the Digital Agency had scrapped all 1,034 regulations governing their use, except for one environmental stricture related to vehicle recycling.

"We have won the war on floppy disks on June 28!" Digital Minister Taro Kono, who has been vocal about wiping out fax machines and other analogue technology in government, told Reuters in a statement on Wednesday.

The Digital Agency was set up during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2021, when a scramble to roll out nationwide testing and vaccination revealed that the government still relied on paper filing and outdated technology.

A charismatic figure with 2.5 million followers on X, Kono formerly headed the defence and foreign ministries as well as the COVID vaccine deployment, taking up his current role in August 2022 after a failed bid to become prime minister.

Japan's digitisation effort has run into numerous snags, however. A contact-tracing app flopped during the pandemic and adoption of the government's My Number digital identification card has been slower than it hoped, amid repeated data mishaps.




Return to tradition. 💾 💾 💾
 
There is a concern among librarians, archivists, and historians about being able to access obsolete technologies. What happens when computers no longer can use floppy drives at all or when the computers with floppy drives (or CD drives or USB ports or whatever) stop functioning entirely and necessary parts are no longer available?
 
My boss still uses them, but for what I have no idea. He got a usb floppy drive and occasionally when I go to his office to ask something I see him inserting/ejecting a disc or hear that noise they make when they write data. He is old as fuck, but uses the latest tech in all other cases, and I know he backs up bigger files on usb sticks.
 
"We have won the war on floppy disks on June 28!" Digital Minister Taro Kono, who has been vocal about wiping out fax machines and other analogue technology in government, told Reuters in a statement on Wednesday.
Well seeing as how bad you lost World War II to the A-bomb I guess you have to take your Ws where you can.

No! Not honorabru froppy disk!

Seriously though, what the fuck can you even FIT on a floppy in The Year of Our Lord 2024?
Plain text files or maybe a few basic bitch doc files. Those 1.44mb don't get you very far these days. Do they even support long filenames/EXT file systems?

There is a concern among librarians, archivists, and historians about being able to access obsolete technologies. What happens when computers no longer can use floppy drives at all or when the computers with floppy drives (or CD drives or USB ports or whatever) stop functioning entirely and necessary parts are no longer available?
That is a very legit concern. Look at how smartphone manufactures waged war on the micro-SD card and removable batteries because retarded consoomers think that any "next thing" is automatically better.
 
Japan will be fine. This is most likely happening because no one makes the fucking things any more.

Bear in mind, this is a country where you still need to carry a personal ink-stamp seal to sign a lot of official documents.
 
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