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Discovering Computers Fundamentals Fifth Edition Chapter 6 Storage.

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Presentation on theme: "Discovering Computers Fundamentals Fifth Edition Chapter 6 Storage."— Presentation transcript:

1 Discovering Computers Fundamentals Fifth Edition Chapter 6 Storage

2 Chapter 6 Objectives Describe the characteristics of magnetic disks Describe the characteristics of a hard disk Discuss various types of miniature, external, and removable hard disks Describe the characteristics of optical disks Differentiate among various CD and DVD formats Identify the uses of tape Discuss PC Cards, ExpressCard modules and the various types of miniature mobile storage media Identify uses of microfilm and microfiche Next

3 Storage What is storage? p. 220 - 221 Fig. 6-1 Next  Holds data, instructions, and information for future use  Storage medium is physical material used for storage  Also called secondary storage

4 Storage What is capacity? p. 222 Next Kilobyte (KB)1 thousand Megabyte (MB)1 million Gigabyte (GB)1 billion Terabyte (TB)1 trillion Petabyte (PB)1 quadrillion  Number of bytes (characters) a storage medium can hold Exabyte (EB)1 quintillion Zettabyte (ZB)1 sextillion Yottabyte (YB)1 septillion

5 Writing Process of transferring items from memory to storage media Writing Storage What is a storage device? p. 222 Next Reading Process of transferring items from storage media to memory Reading Hardware that records and retrieves items to and from storage media Functions as source of input Creates output

6 Storage What is access time? p. 222  Time it takes storage device to locate item on storage medium Next  Time required to deliver item from memory to processor

7 Magnetic Disks What is a hard disk? p. 223 Fig. 6-4 Next  High-capacity storage  Consists of several inflexible, circular platters that store items electronically  Components enclosed in airtight, sealed case for protection

8 Magnetic Disks What are characteristics of a hard disk? p. 224 Fig. 6-5 Next Sample Hard Disk Characteristics Advertised capacity500 GB Platters4 Read/write heads8 Cylinders16,383 Bytes per second512 Sectors per track63 Sectors per drive973,773,168 Revolutions per minute7,200 Transfer rate 300 MB p/sec Access time8.5 ms actual disk capacity

9 Magnetic Disks p. 222 Fig. 6-3 Next What are tracks and sectors? Formatting prepares disk for use Track is narrow recording band that forms full circle on disk Sector stores up to 512 bytes of data

10 Magnetic Disks What is a cylinder? p. 225 Fig. 6-7 Next  Vertical section of track through all platters  Single movement of read/write head arms accesses all platters in cylinder platter read/write head platter sides cylinder track sector

11 Magnetic Disks How does a hard disk work? p. 224 Fig. 6-6 Next

12 Magnetic Disks What is a head crash? p. 225 Fig. 6-8 Next  Spinning creates cushion of air that floats read/write head above platter  Occurs when read/write head touches platter surface  A smoke particle, dust particle, or human hair could render drive unusable  Clearance between head and platter is approximately two-millionths of an inch

13 Next Magnetic Disks What is RAID? p. 226  Redundant Array of Independent Disks  Connects multiple smaller disks into a single unit that acts as a single large hard disk

14 Magnetic Disks What are external hard disks and removable hard disks? p. 226 Fig. 6-11 Next External hard disk—freestanding hard disk that connects to system unit Removable hard disk—hard disk that you insert and remove from hard disk drive  Used to back up or transfer files

15 Magnetic Disks What is a disk controller? p. 227 Next SAS controller supports many connected devices at once, including hard disks, CD and DVD drives, printers, scanners, digital cameras, and more EIDEEnhancedIntegratedDrive Electronics) controller supports four hard disks, provides connections for CD and DVD drives EIDE (Enhanced Integrated Drive Electronics) controller supports four hard disks, provides connections for CD and DVD drives SCSI controller supports up to fifteen devices including hard disks, CD and DVD drives, tape drives, printers, scanners, network cards SATASerial Advanced Technology Attachment) controller uses serial signals to transfer data, instructions, and information SATA (Serial Advanced Technology Attachment) controller uses serial signals to transfer data, instructions, and information  Chip and circuits that control transfer of items from disk

16 Magnetic Disks What is a floppy disk? p. 228 Next  Portable, inexpensive storage medium (also called diskette) Thin, circular, flexible film enclosed in 3.5” wide plastic shell

17 Optical Discs What is a CD-ROM? p. 231 Fig. 6-17 Next  Compact disc read-only memory  Cannot erase or modify contents  Typically holds 650 MB to 1 GB  Commonly used to distribute multimedia and complex software

18 Optical Discs What are CD-Rs and CD-RWs? p. 232 - 233 Next Must have CD recorder or CD-R drive Cannot erase disc’s contents CD-R (compact disc-recordable) — c disc you can write on once CD-RW (compact disc-rewritable) — ce erasable disc you can write on multiple times Must have CD-RW software and CD-RW drive

19 Optical Discs What is a DVD-ROM (digital versatile disc-ROM or digital video disc-ROM)? p. 233 Fig. 6-19 Next  Must have DVD-ROM drive or DVD player to read DVD-ROM  Stores databases, music, complex software, and movies  Blu-ray discs have storage capacity of up to 100 GB  HD-DVD discs have storage capacity of up to 60 GB  HD-VMDs have storage capacity of up to 40 GB or more  UMD can store up to 1.8 GB

20 Optical Discs How does a DVD-ROM store data? p. 233 - 234 Fig. 6-20 Next  Two layers of pits are used, lower layer is semitransparent so laser can read through  Some are double-sided  Many types of recordable and rewritable DVDs are available  DVD-R and DVD+R  DVD-RW, DVD+RW, and DVD-RAM

21 Tape What is tape? p. 234 Fig. 6-21 Next  Magnetically coated plastic ribbon capable of storing large amounts of data at low cost  Primarily used for backup

22 Tape How is data stored on a tape? p. 235 Next  Sequential access  Unlike direct access — used on hard disks, CDs, and DVDs — which can locate particular item immediately  Reads and writes data consecutively, like music tape

23 PC Cards and ExpressCard Modules What are PC Cards and ExpressCard Modules? p. 235 Figs. 6-22 Next  Adds capabilities to computer  Credit-card-sized device commonly used in notebook computers

24 Miniature Mobile Storage Media What is miniature mobile storage media? p. 236 Fig. 6-23 Next  Storage for small mobile devices

25 Miniature Mobile Storage Media What is a USB Flash Drive? p. 237 Fig. 6-24 Next  Plugs in a USB port on a computer or mobile device  Storage capacities up to 64 GB  Making the floppy disk nearly obsolete

26 Miniature Mobile Storage Media What is a smart card? p. 237 Fig. 6-25 Next  Stores data on microprocessor embedded in small card  Input, process, output, and storage capabilities

27 Microfilm and Microfiche What are microfilm and microfiche? p. 238 Fig. 6-26 Next Images recorded using computer output microfilm recorder Store microscopic images of documents on roll or sheet of film Microfilm – 100 – to 215 – foot roll of film Microfiche – small sheet of film, usually 4”  6”

28 Microfilm and Microfiche How do life expectancies of various media compare? p. 238 Fig. 6-27 Next  Microfilm and microfiche have longest life of any storage media

29 Summary of Storage Internal hard disks External and Removable hard disks Floppy disks CD-ROMs Recordable and Rewritable CDs DVD-ROMs Blu-ray Discs and HD DVD discs Recordable and rewritable DVDs Tape PC Cards and ExpressCard Modules Flash memory cards USB Flash Drives Microfilm and microfiche Chapter 6 Complete Smart Cards


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