Interesting Things to Know
The Floppy Disk Turns 50
The 5.25-inch floppy disk turns 50 in 2026, though it has not been able to celebrate in person for quite some time.
Introduced in 1976 by Shugart Associates, the original “minifloppy” helped move personal computing into homes, schools, and offices. By today’s standards, it held almost nothing. Early versions stored about 88 kilobytes, roughly enough for a few pages of text.
At the time, that felt useful.
The floppy disk was light, portable, and simple. You could save a document, carry it across the room, or mail it to someone. For early computer users, that was a major improvement over bulkier storage systems.
The 5.25-inch floppy eventually gave way to the smaller, sturdier 3.5-inch disk in the 1980s. Millions of Mac and PC users remember feeding those disks into machines one after another to install programs, save school papers, or back up files.
Anyone who used an older Macintosh remembers the ritual: insert disk, wait, eject, insert the next one, repeat.
But technology moved fast. Hard drives grew larger. CDs became common. Then came flash drives, memory cards, cloud storage, and phones with more storage than entire offices once had.
Apple helped signal the floppy’s decline in 1998 when it released the iMac without a floppy drive. Dell stopped including floppy drives as standard equipment in 2003. By 2011, floppy disk manufacturing had largely come to an end.
Still, the floppy never completely disappeared.
Its shape lives on as the “save” icon in many computer programs — a tiny picture of a disk that younger users may recognize without ever having held one. It is a digital ghost from an earlier age of computing.
The floppy disk may be obsolete, but it earned its place in history. It carried homework, business files, games, family letters, and early software from one machine to another.
Not bad for something that could barely hold one modern photo.






