The assignment from
Mr Tri Djoko Wahjono, Ir., M.Sc.
Mr Tri Djoko Wahjono, Ir., M.Sc.
1. How Are Storage Devices Different from Storage Media?
A storage medium is the physical material on which a computer
keeps data, instructions, and information. The number of bytes (characters) a
storage medium can hold is its capacity. A storage device is the computer
hardware that records and/or retrieves items to and from storage media. Writing
is the process of transferring items from memory to a storage medium, and
reading is the process of transferring these items from a storage medium into
memory.
2. What Are the
Characteristics of an Internal Hard Disk?
A hard disk, also called a hard disk drive or hard drive, is
a storage device that contains one or more inflexible, circular platters that
use magnetic particles to store data, instructions, and information.
Traditionally, hard disks stored data using longitudinal recording, which
aligned the magnetic particles horizontally. With perpendicular recording, hard
disks align the particles vertically, making much greater storage capacities
possible. The capacity of a hard disk is determined from whether it uses longitudinal
or perpendicular recording, the number of platters it contains, and the
composition of the magnetic coating on the platters. A platter is made of
aluminum, glass, or ceramic and is coated with a material that allows items to
be recorded magnetically on its surface. Each platter has two read/write heads,
one for each side. The location of a read/write head often is referred to by its
cylinder, which is the vertical section of a track that passes through all
platters. Formatting is the process of dividing the disk into tracks and
sectors. A track is a narrow recording band that forms a full circle on the surface
of the disk. The disk’s storage locations are divided into pie-shaped sections,
which break the tracks into small arcs called sectors. While the computer is running,
the platters in the hard disk rotate at 5,400 to 15,000 revolutions per minute
(rpm), which allows nearly instant access to all tracks and sectors on the
platters. Transfer rate is the speed with which data, instructions, and
information transfer to and from a storage device. Access time measures the
amount of time it takes a storage device to locate an item on a storage medium,
or the time required to deliver an item from memory to the processor.
3. What Is the
Purpose of Network Attached Storage Devices, External and Removable Hard Disks,
and Hard Disk Controllers?
A network attached storage (NAS) device is a server
connected to a network with the sole purpose of providing storage. NAS devices
often use a RAID configuration. An external hard disk is a separate freestanding
hard disk that connects with a cable to a USB or FireWire port on the system
unit or communicates wirelessly. External hard disks have storage capacities up
to 4 TB and more. A removable hard disk can be inserted or removed from a
built-in or external drive. Removable hard disks have storage capacities up to 1
TB. A disk controller consists of a special-purpose chip and electronic
circuits that control the transfer of data, instructions, and information from
a disk to and from the system bus and other components in a computer. A hard
disk controller may be part of the hard disk on the motherboard, or it may be a
separate adapter card inside the system unit.
4. What Are the
Various Types of Flash Memory Storage?
Flash memory chips are a type of solid state media, which means
they consist entirely of electronic components and contain no moving parts. A
solid state drive (SSD) typically uses flash memory to store data,
instructions, and information. A memory card is a removable flash memory device
that you insert and remove from a slot in a computer, mobile device, or card
reader/writer. Common memory cards include CompactFlash (CF ), Secure Digital
(SD), Secure Digital High Capacity (SDHC), microSD, microSDHC, xD Picture Card,
Memory Stick, and Memory Stick Micro (M2). A USB flash drive, sometimes called
a thumb drive, is a flash memory storage device that plugs in a port on a
computer or mobile device. An ExpressCard module is a removable device that
fits in an ExpressCard slot. ExpressCard modules can add memory, storage,
communications, or other capabilities to a computer.
5. What Is Cloud
Storage, and What Are Its Advantages?
Cloud storage is an Internet service that provides storage
for computer users. Available for all sizes of users, with various degrees of
storage services available for home and business users, cloud storage fees
vary, depending on the user’s storage requirements. Advantages include
accessing files on the Internet from any computer or device with Internet
access; storing large audio, video, and graphics fi les on the Internet
instantaneously; allowing others to access their fi les on the Internet;
viewing time-critical data and images immediately; storing off-site backups of
data; and providing data center functions.
6. What Are the Characteristics
of Optical Discs?
An optical disc is a type of storage media that consists of
a flat, round, portable disc made of metal, plastic, and lacquer that is
written and read by a laser. Optical discs, which primarily store software,
data, digital photos, movies, and music, contain microscopic pits
(indentations) and lands (flat areas) in their middle layer. Optical discs commonly
store items in a single track that spirals from the center of the disc to its
edge. Like a hard disk, the single track is divided into evenly sized sectors.
7. How Are the
Various Types of Optical Discs Different?
A CD-ROM, or compact disc read-only memory, is a type of
optical disc that uses laser technology to store items. Users can read the contents
of standard CD-ROMs but cannot erase or modify their contents. A CD-R (compact disc-recordable)
is a multisession disc on which users can record their own items, such as text,
graphics, and audio. Each part of a CD-R can be written on only one time, and
the disc’s contents cannot be erased. A CD-RW (compact disc-rewritable) is an
erasable disc that can be written on multiple times. An archive disc stores
photos from an online photo center in the jpg fi le format. A Picture CD is a
single-session CD-ROM that stores digital versions of fi lm using the jpg
format at a lower resolution than an archive disc. A DVD-ROM (digital versatile
disc-read-only memory or digital video disc-read-only memory) is a high
capacity optical disc that you can read but not write on or erase. A newer, more
expensive DVD format is Blu-ray Disc-ROM (BD-ROM), with higher capacity and
better quality than standard DVDs. Many types of recordable and rewritable DVD
formats are available. DVD-R and DVD+R are DVD-recordable formats. BD-R is a
high-capacity DVD-recordable format. DVD-RW, DVD+RW, and DVD+RAM are rewritable
DVD formats that allow users to erase and record multiple times. BD-RE is a high-capacity
rewritable DVD format.
8. How Are Tape,
Magnetic Stripe Cards, Smart Cards, Microfilm and Microfiche, and Enterprise
Storage Used?
Tape is a magnetically coated ribbon of plastic capable of
storing large amounts of data and information at a low cost. A tape drive reads
and writes data and information on tape. Business users utilize tape most often
for long-term storage and backup. A magnetic stripe card is a credit card,
entertainment card, bank card, or other similar card with a stripe that contains
information identifying you and the card. A magnetic stripe card reader reads
the information stored on the stripe. A smart card, which is similar in size to
a credit or ATM card, stores data on a thin microprocessor embedded in the
card. A smart card reader reads the information on the smart card and updates
it if necessary. Microfilm is a 100- to 215-foot roll of fi lm. Microfiche is a
small sheet of fi lm, usually about 4 3 6 inches. Microfilm and microfiche
reduce the amount of paper firms must handle, are inexpensive, and have the longest
life of any storage media. Enterprises use computers, servers, and networks to manage
and store huge volumes of data and information. In an enterprise, some storage
systems can provide more than 185 TB of storage, and optical disc servers hold
hundreds of optical discs.
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