This document discusses various computer storage devices. It begins by covering floppy disks, zip disks, and how to protect data on magnetic storage disks. It then discusses optical storage devices like CDs, DVDs, describing their read/write capabilities and storage capacities. Emerging technologies like fluorescent multilayer discs and solid state storage devices are also introduced. The document aims to teach about different storage media available for personal computers.
3. Slide 3
What You Will Learn About
How data is stored on both hard and floppy disks
The various optical storage media available for personal
computers
4. Slide 4
Floppy and Zip Disks and Drives
A disk or diskette is a portable storage medium.
High-density floppy disks that are commonly
used today store 1.44 MB of data for PC and 1.2
for Mac.
Disks work with a disk drive.
Zip disks is a magnetic portable storage
medium store up to 750 MB of data and are not
downwardly compatible with floppy disks.
Zip Drive
Floppy Drive
Floppy Disk
5. Slide 5
Protecting the Data on Your Disks
Don’t touch the surface of the disk.
Don’t expose disk to magnetic fields.
Avoid contamination (food, drink).
Avoid condensation.
Avoid excessive temperatures.
6. Slide 6
Optical Storage Devices
Uses laser beams to read patterns (pits / land) of data
encoded on the surface of plastic disc
Pit = 0 land = 1
7. Slide 7
CD Discs and Drives
CD-ROM stands for Compact Disc-
Read Only Memory.
Data recorded on them are to be
read many times but it be changed
CD-ROM drives can not write data
to discs.
They are capable of storing 700 MB
of data. How many Floppy disk?
They are used for storing operating
systems, large application programs,
and multimedia programs.
8. Slide 8
CD-R and CD-RW Discs and Recorders
CD-R
Discs can be read and
written to.
Discs can only be
written to “once.”
CD-R drives are capable
of reading and writing
data.
CD-RW
Discs can be read and
written to.
Discs are erasable.
Discs can be written to
many times.
CD-RW drives are
capable of reading,
writing, and erasing data.
9. Slide 9
DVD Discs and Drives
DVD stands for Digital Video
Disc.
DVD technology is similar to
CD-ROM technology.
DVDs are capable of storing up to
17GB of data.
The data transfer rate of DVD
drives is comparable to that of
hard disk drives.
10. Slide 10
DVD-RW and DVD+RW Discs
DVD-R and DVD+R drives have the ability to
read/write data.
DVD-RW and DVD+RW drives allow you to
write, erase, and read from a disc many times.
11. Slide 11
Protecting Data on Discs
Do not expose discs to excessive heat.
Do not touch underside of discs.
Do not write on the label side of discs with a
hard instrument.
Do not stack discs.
Store discs in original
boxes.
12. Slide 12
The Future of Storage
FMD-ROM
• Fluorescent (very bright) multilayer disc-read-only memory.
• Each layer of the disc contains data.
• Layer is transparent enough for light to shine through.
• Laser can focus on one layer at a time.
• Allows for additional storage capability.
13. Slide 13
Solid State Storage Devices
Solid state storage devices use nonvolatile memory
chips to retain data.
They do not have moving parts.
They are small, lightweight, reliable, and portable.
16. Slide 16
Smart card
Is a credit card sized device that combines flash
memory with a tiny microprocessor enabling the card
to process as well as save information
Digital cash system
User can purchase a prepaid amount of electronically
stored money. Used in many systems as parking, tools,
transport fares, …