>>385937290s digital cameras hadn't yet really delved into ILC systems yet.
Nikon's F mount had just developed a system for autofocus using a screw drive in the body and Canon has come up with the ElectroFocus system, or EF to completely "revolutionise" the SLR market.
Kyocera, trying to catch up with the competition, came out with 2 new ILC systems - Contax N for an SLR that'd have autofocus in the lens, replacing the manual focus only C/Y mount and the Contax G, an autofocus ILC rangefinder that was meant to complete against Leica.
Most 90s digicams were hot garbage. Point and shoot devices with built in memory, or using one of the early flash cards like SmartMedia or CompactFlash. Tech companies were lining up to make digicams while the old companies were sticking to film.
As mentioned by others, digital ILC systems didn't pick up until the 2000s. The first "full frame" DSLR was the Contax N Digital followed shortly by the Canon EOS 1Ds and the Kodak DCS Pro 14n (F-Mount) all in 2002.
Contax would be killed off by Kyocera in 2005, Canon would go on to dominate DSLRs and Kodak joined in with Olympus to make the Four Thirds system, which ultimately bankrupted Eastman Kodak, as early FT cameras sold like crap.