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floppy disk |
Also found in: Wikipedia, Hutchinson | 0.01 sec. |
floppy diskor disketteMagnetic storage medium used with computers. Floppy disks are made of flexible plastic coated with a magnetic material, and are enclosed in a hard plastic case. They are typically 3.5 in. (9 cm) in diameter. Data are arranged on their surfaces in concentric tracks. A disk is inserted in the computer's floppy disk drive, an assembly of magnetic heads and a mechanical device for rotating the disk for reading or writing purposes. A small electromagnet, called a magnetic head, writes a binary digit (1 or 0) onto the disk by magnetizing a tiny spot on the disk in different directions, and reads digits by detecting the magnetization direction of the spots. With the increasing use of e-mail attachments and other means to transfer files from computer to computer, the use of floppy disks has waned, though they are still widely used to keep second (backup) copies of valuable files. floppy diskA reusable magnetic storage medium introduced by IBM in 1971. It was called a floppy because the first varieties were housed in bendable jackets. Woefully undersized for today's use, it is no longer standard equipment on computers. However, until the early 1990s, the floppy was the primary method for distributing software and was widely used for backup. By the mid-1990s, it had mostly given way to the CD-ROM.
Final
Storage
Housing Capacity Capacity Range Creator
3.5" rigid 1.44MB 400KB - 1.44MB Sony
3.5" rigid 2.88MB (See ED.) IBM
5.25" flexible 1.2MB 100KB - 1.2MB Shugart
8" flexible 500KB 100 - 500KB IBM
Although floppy disks look the same, what is recorded on them determines their capacity and compatibility. Every new floppy must be "formatted," which records the sectors on the disk that hold the data. See format program, magnetic disk and high-capacity floppy.
floppy disk a flexible removable magnetic disk that stores information and can be used to store data for use in a microprocessor floppy disk [¦fläp·ē ′disk] (computer science) A flexible plastic disk coated with magnetic oxide and used for data entry to a computer; a slot in its protective envelope or housing, which remains stationary while the disk rotates, exposes the track positions for the magnetic read/write head of the drive unit. Also known as diskette.
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BIGGER FLOPPIES: 3M will begin selling computer diskettes next month that will hold 120 megabytes of information, about 80 times as much as the floppy diskettes that are now common. Computer buffs at the show were practically drooling over and buying for under $2,000 486-33-megahertz PCs configured with the following options: two floppy diskette drives, a 200-megabyte hard disk drive, four megabytes of random access memory (RAM), 256 kilobytes of cache memory, a super VGA noninterlaced color monitor and card with one MB of memory. With the decline of the floppy diskette as a widely-used storage medium, the megabit growth and increased functionality of our U3 smart drives, people are confronted with an apparently unmet need to easily and affordably share photos, documents and other files with family, friends and work colleagues," said Tzipi Ozer-Armon, general manager for msystems' Retail and Enterprise division. |
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