HARD DISK DRIVE
ICT-TLE
GROUP 2-PHOENIX
BERISO, GILXANDER
CARTERA, LORENZO
MANALOTO, NICOLAI
YUAN, AMOS
OCUAMAN, GERICO
SLIDES PREPARED BY:
PELAGIO, MARIA RAFAELA
STORAGE DRIVE
Any computer hardware
that is used for storing and
extracting data files.
Also known as storage
medium/media
It can hold and store
information both
permanently and
temporarily
It can be internal or
2 TYPES OF STORAGE
DEVICE
1. PRIMARY STORAGE
DEVICE
generally smaller in size,
designed to hold data
temporarily and are internal to
the computer.
They have the fastest data
access speed, and include RAM
(Random Access Memory) and
cache memory.
2. SECONDARY STORAGE
DEVICE
Usually have large storage
capacity
Store data permanently
They can be both internal
and external to the
computer
Examples: hard disk,
compact disk drive, USB
HARD DRIVE OR
HARD DISK DRIVE
HARD DRIVE OR HARD DISK
DRIVE
A hard drive or hard disk drive, is a
magnetic storage device that is installed
inside the computer.
The hard drive is used as permanent
storage for data.
HARD DRIVE OR HARD DISK
DRIVE
In a Windows computer, the
hard drive is usually configured
as the C: drive and contains the
operating system and
applications.
The hard drive is often
configured as the first drive in
the boot sequence.
HARD DRIVE OR HARD DISK
DRIVE
The
storage capacity of a hard drive is
measured in billions of bytes, or
gigabytes (GB).
The speed of a hard drive is measured
in revolutions per minute (RPM).
HARD DRIVE OR HARD DISK
DRIVE
Multiple hard drives can be added to
increase storage capacity.
Traditional hard drives are magnetic.
All data is stored magnetically, allowing
information to be saved when power is shut
off.
Magnetic hard drives have drive motors
designed to spin magnetic platters and the
Hard drives need a read only
memory (ROM) controller
board to instruct the
read/write heads how, when
and where to move across
the platters.
Hard drives have disks
stacked together and spin in
unison. The read/write heads
are controlled by an
actuator, which magnetically
reads from and writes to the
platters.
The read/write heads float
Both sides of the platters are
used to store data.
Each side or surface of one
disk is called a head, with each
one divided into sectors and
tracks.
All tracks are the same
distance from the center of the
disk. Collectively they
comprise one cylinder. Data is
written to a disk starting at the
furthest track. The read/write
heads move inward to the next
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