1 / 10

CMPTR Chapter 2 – Part 2 (Storage)

CMPTR Chapter 2 – Part 2 (Storage). Storage – Punch Cards. Punch Cards were used before disk drives. Player Piano Roll. Storage – Magnetic Disks.

dextra
Download Presentation

CMPTR Chapter 2 – Part 2 (Storage)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CMPTR Chapter 2 – Part 2 (Storage)

  2. Storage – Punch Cards Punch Cards were used before disk drives. Player Piano Roll

  3. Storage – Magnetic Disks On magnetic media, such as floppy and hard disks, data is stored magnetically; the data (0s and 1s) is represented using different magnetic alignments. Large Mainframe Hard Drives from 1970’s 3½” floppy 5¼” floppy Inside a hard drive

  4. Storage – Magnetic Disks Hard drive for Macbook Air, laptop computer, and desktop computer. Newer Macbook Air’s have switchedto SSD drives. External USBHard Drive Disks (both magnetic and optical) are Random or Direct access - the read/write head can move directly to the data. Disk performance is measured by seek time (ms) and data transfer rate (MBps). Disks may have cache RAM to speed up access time. Network Attached Storage (NAS) Connects to hub with network cable so all computers on your network can access it.

  5. Network Storage and Online/Cloud Storage Systems • Remote storage devices accessed via the Internet are often referred to as online storage or cloud storage.

  6. Storage – Magnetic Tape • The disadvantage is that tape has sequential access (have to fast forward and rewind) as opposed to direct/random access for disks. • The advantage is tape has a very low cost per megabyte of storage and is removable. Therefore, tape is mostly used for backup and archival purposes where slow data access time is not as important.

  7. Storage – Magnetic Tape Backup Terminology Full Backup – All data on hard drive is backed up.Incremental Backup – Only modified data (since last full backup) is backed up. An example backup plan for a server might be to do a full backup on Sunday night, and incremental backups Mon, Tue, Wed, Thur, and Fri nights.Off-site Backup – data is stored at a remote location.Historical Backup – data backup is stored for a long time or forever.

  8. Storage – Optical (CD) CD formatsAudio Format was developed by Sony and Philipsin 1981 and could contain 74 minutes of music at asampling rate of 44.1 kHz.CDFS is the standard format of a CD that containscomputer files and folders. MP3 CD’s are fileformatted CD’s with mp3 songs.CD typesCD-ROM is pressed at the factory and can besingle/double sided, single/dual layer (80 min/700 MB).CD-R can be recorded once.CD-RW are rewritable. The instructor does notrecommend using these because of compatibilityissues.

  9. Storage – Optical (DVD & BD) DVD typesDVD-ROM is pressed at the factory and can be single/double sided, single/dual layer (4.7 GB – 18.8 GB).DVD-R, DVD+R can be recorded once and store 4.7 GB.DVD-RW, DVD+RW are rewritable and store 4.7 GB.DVD-R DL, DVD+R DL dual layer DVD’s can be recorded once and store 8.5 GB.Blu-rayBD (Blu-ray Disk) is a standard created by Sony. They store 25/50 GB (single/dual layer). BD-R are recordable Blu-ray disks 25/50 GB (single/dual layer).

  10. Storage – Flash Memory SSDWhen flash memory is used in place of a hard disk drive, it is called an SSD (solid state drive). It is faster and uses less power than a hard disk drive.

More Related