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by baybal2 1949 days ago
You forgot MD Data, and MD Data2, and their assorted list of supported file formats.

Some played MP3, some did different incompatible versions of ATRAC, some did raw PCM packed in two different containers.

And there was even a digital videocamera using Data2.

Panasonic MD was also barely compatible with Sony's one. Record in one, but not play in other.

1 comments

I don't think MD-Data ever made it to consumer availability in the US, but you're not entirely wrong with regard to fragmentation. That said, Sony seemed to do a pretty good job of keeping it under control in the US prior to the release of NetMD in 2001, but I suspect "seemed" is the operative word there, and that it had less to do with effective management of the medium on Sony's part and more with the whole thing being an incredibly tiny niche in the US for its entire lifespan.

Sony certainly doesn't have a good enough record on avoiding media fragmentation generally, that any benefit of the doubt seems warranted here...

Well, I spend my childhood in Far East Russia. Vladivostok, and Blagoveschensk primarily.

Japan was all over that place.

I also remember DAT players. People say they were a commercial failure in Japan.

Players themselves were a frequent sight on sale, but tapes were near impossible to find, let alone ones with pre-recorded music.

And they were prone to tearing in humid climate. They were scotch taped, and superglued 100 times over, that's how rare they were.