Storage Media | Hard Disks | DVD Disc | |||
Optical Discs | Tape Media | Flash Drive | |||
Zip Catridges | RAID | Removable Media | |||
(U)niversal (B)us (S)erial |
Removable Storage
by George HernandeRemovable storage is computer storage memory that can be switched out easily. EG: A floppy disk is removable storage but the hard drive is not considered to be removable storage.
The various kinds of removable storage technologies include:
Magnetic Disk
Data is read from and written onto a surface embedded with minute magnetic particles by a head. In hard drives, the head floats above the surface, while in a floppy disk the head rides on the surface.
Optical
Data is read and written with laser onto a material protected by a substrate. High capacity storage immune to magnetic and other environmental dangers. This includes CDs (Compact Disc), WORMs (Write Once Read Many), EOs (Erasable Optical), MD (Mini Discs), and DVD (Digital Video Disc).
MO
(Magneto-Optical). Data is written by bringing points to the Curie point (approximately 200 C) via laser and then data encoding the point via a magnetic head. Data is read by a laser taking advantage of the Kerr Effect, i.e. the difference in the polarity of reflected light depending on the orientation of magnetic particles.
- 5.25 in @ 2.6 GB.
- 3.5 in @ 128 MB - 230 MB - 530 MB - 640 MB - 1.3 GB
LIMDOW
(Light Intensity Modulated Direct OverWrite). Like MO except that instead of a magnetic head, the temperature of the laser can reverse the polarity of magnetic layers within the disk itself. Thus LIMDOW is faster because it only takes one pass in contrast with MO's two passes.
Phase Change
Data is written via heating pits via laser. The laser can amorphize the spot, or, upon reheating return the spot to its originals state by recrystallization. This is technology utilized by Panasonic's PDs (Phase change Disks).
Flash
Data is read and written to a memory chip. These are usually quickly accessed by the USB port.
Except for magnetic disk technology, the removable storage technologies are usually used for static data. EG: CDs are usually written onto once.
Floppy disk |
Current version spins at 300 rpm with 135 tracks/inch. These magnetic disks store bits via magnetic inversions at intervals of 2-4 microseconds along its tracks. 5.25 inch at different capacities:
3.5 inch at different capacities:
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Memory sticks |
8 MB to 512 MB. These are flash memory storage sticks that usually plug into a USB port.
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Floppy replacement |
100 MB to 150 MB
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Supper floppy |
200 MB to 300 MB. Magnetic or MO devices. Includes Iomegas 237/250 MB Zip Disk. |
Hard disk complement |
500 MB to 1 GB. Magnetic, MO, and phase change devices. Like a hard disk partition. May function as a secondary but slow hard disk. |
Removable hard disk |
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