| Field | Data Storage |
| Went Obsolete | 1996 or so |
| Made Obsolete By | Cheap and cavernous hard disks |
| Knowledge Assumed | not much… |
| When useful | When this skill could still be used in the real world |
Back when hard drives were still expensive enough to purchase and difficult enough for the average user to install, and the size of programs was outpacing the storage commonly available in an average home PC, whole-drive compression software such as Stacker, SuperStor?, and DoubleSpace? were seen as ways to extend the mileage of a hard drive.
They worked well in some applications, but had limitations:
—
This is incorrect. Hard drive compression is still in use and has progressed since 1994. However, it is true that the skills required to cope with the relatively primitive software and mechanisms of the time are now obsolete.
Sun's latest filesystem, ZFS, does compression and cryptography along with error detection. Crytographic and compressed filesystems and data structures are increasing in usage, not decreasing, but are now largely invisible to the end user..
The programs mentioned in this article were primitive PCs?, and yes, those are obsolete now, but hard drive data compression is not obsolete.
