HappySqurriel said:
3.5 inch floppy discs were an IBM product, Sony introduced their own proprietary format that was short lived. Sony and Phillips co-operated to produce the CD; and at the time Phillips would have been the larger of the two companies that was the major force behind it. Sony also introduced their own proprietary format, the Mini Disc, which lived a long life in obscurity. Sony and Phillips followed up the CD with the SACD, which was a higher resolution audio format that was short lived. SPDIF is a connector format and I doubt 95% of people you asked on the street would know what SPDIF was. DVD was a format that was pushed by a wide consortium, Sony introduced their own proprietary format (UMD) that was short lived. Blu-Ray is pushed by a wide consortium (not as wide as DVD) and can not be said to be popular with the masses yet.
I'm not trying to bash Sony here, but they have an amazing track record of introducing formats which are unsuccessful. With that said, the glasses free technology that the 3DS is based on is (probably) the technology that people will eventually choose to buy into; but the technology (probably) will require 5 to 10 years of development before it is well suited to usage in the living room. What this means is that 3D in the living room will depend on glasses for quite some time; and I suspect will remain a niche product for quite some time |
Sony created the 3.5" floppy disc. I don't know what your source is. IBM invented the floppy disc. Not the 3.5" version of it (you know, the one that got mainstream and became the standard until just a few years ago).
SPDIF may be a connector format, but that's the connector that is on most sound systems, most modern TVs and even game consoles (PS2 and PS3) to deliver full 5.1 through only one cable. Ask anyone what SPDIF stands for, and you're right, not a lot of people will know. Ask them if they have a Digital Audio Output or Input on their audio-video components, and I'm sure the ratio will be much higher.
That Sony went into a joint venture with an other company is irrelevent. The point still stand that their products made it to the mainstream and became standards.
It's like saying that Nintendo aren't the ones bringing glasses-less 3D to the mainstream since it is Sharp that is providing the screens. ¬_¬
And as far as I know, Blu-Ray is the physical HD movie format standard right now.
Again, the point isn't to say that all that they developed made it to the mainstream. The point is that it is not true to say that they were never able to create products that became standards and achieved mainstream adoption.







