The earliest form of removable media,
punched cards and
tapes, predates the electronic computer by centuries, with the
Jacquard loom of 1801 using interlinked cards to control the machine. This followed a loom made by
Basile Bouchon in 1725 that used paper tape for its instructions. Punched tape was later used in
Colossus, the first electronic computer.
Magnetic tape was developed in the early 20th century in Germany, based on
magnetic wire recording invented by
Valdemar Poulsen in 1898. In 1951, the
UNIVAC I was released, using magnetic tape to store data. 8-inch
floppy disks were commercially introduced in 1971 by
IBM, with them being compacted to -inch by Shugart Associates in 1976. At the same time
Compact Cassettes started being used to store data, being popular in the late 1970s and 1980s for holding data for
personal computers. In 1982, the -inch floppy disk became commonplace, with its introduction for the
Apple Macintosh and
Amiga. The
CD-ROM was introduced in 1985, providing much higher capacity than a floppy disk, however could not be written to. This was resolved in 1990 with the introduction of the
CD-R. The
CD-RW, introduced in 1997 allowed the CD to be written to multiple times, rather than just once, as with the CD-R.
DVD versions of these formats introduced in the late 1990s provided further increases in capacity. Additional capacity improvements were achieved with
Blu-ray in 2006. The turn of the millennium saw the widespread introduction of
solid-state removable media, with the
SD card being introduced in 1999, followed by the
USB flash drive in 2000. The capacity of these removable flash drives improved over time, with 2013 seeing
Kingston unveiling a 1
terabyte USB flash drive. == Floppy disk storage ==