1 / 7

Chapter 3: S torage Capacity & Storage Media

Chapter 3: S torage Capacity & Storage Media. Abbey Clark & Susan Holl . What’s in a Byte ?!. A byte is a unit of storage created by on-off pulses in a computer. Types of Storage. Floppy Disk Mylar disk inside plastic shell Holds up to 1,444,000 bytes (1.44 megabytes)

yannis
Download Presentation

Chapter 3: S torage Capacity & Storage Media

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. Chapter 3:Storage Capacity & Storage Media Abbey Clark & Susan Holl

  2. What’s in a Byte?! A byte is a unit of storage created by on-off pulses in a computer.

  3. Types of Storage • Floppy Disk • Mylar disk inside plastic shell • Holds up to 1,444,000 bytes (1.44 megabytes) • Getting a little dated; some computers no longer include floppy disk drives • Hard Disk • Permanently mounted inside the computer • Storage ranges but is typically multiple gigabytes (billions of bytes) or data • Usually designated the C drive  is the primary mass storage area for both programs and data

  4. Removable Media • Portable disks and cartridges that can be added to a computer • Cartridges vary in size from 250 megabytes to 1 gigabyte • A portable hard disk is a self-contained disk and drive that plugs into a computer port • Portable hard disks can vary from a few to hundreds of gigabytes in capacity • Very convenient for transporting large multimedia files • Examples: USB flash drive, floppy disk, CD/DVD

  5. CD-ROM • Holes and flat areas are read by a laser mounted in a CD drive. • CD-ROMs are read only, making them a one-way storage, unlike disks. (ROM= Read Only Memory) • CD-R • CD-Rs are special CDs that can be written on once and read multiple times. They require a recordable drive to create them but can be read by any CD drive. • CD-RW • CD-RWs are CDs that are rewritable but require a CD-RW drive to store and erase data. CD-RWs can be read my most CD drives. • CDs can store up to 650 megabytes • Often used for multimedia because of their large capacity for storing audio, video, and text.

  6. DVD-ROM • DVDs are optical media that can store up to 17 gigabytes of data. • DVD-ROMs are read-only. After initial recording, data cannot be stored on them. • DVD-Rs • Are recordable but require a DVD writer • Three competing formats are available: DVD-R/W and DVD-RW. DVD RAM offers other features but is incompatible with some players. • DVD-Rs and DVD-RWs can record up to 2 hours of quality video.

  7. Works Cited • Lever-Duffy, McDonald Mizell. Teaching and Learning With Technology, Second Edition. • www.courseweb.unt.edu/rhondac/fall2005/ch03.ppt#296,13,howcomputerswork

More Related