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floppy disk |
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floppy diskIn computing, a storage device consisting of a light, flexible disk enclosed in a cardboard or plastic jacket. The disk is placed in a disk drive, where it rotates at high speed. Data are recorded magnetically on one or both surfaces. Floppy disks were invented by IBM in 1971 as a means of loading programs into a computer. They were originally 20 cm/8 in in diameter and typically held about 240 kilobytes of data. Present-day floppy disks, widely used on microcomputers, are 8.8 cm/3.5 in in diameter, and generally hold up to 2 megabytes, depending on the disk formatting. Floppy disks are inexpensive, and light enough to send through the post, but have slower access speeds and are more fragile than hard disks. The use of floppy disks is increasingly being replaced by the higher capacity and more robust memory stick or pen-drive. (See also disk.) How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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Dell says its decision to eliminate the floppy drive came after focus groups indicated they were no longer necessary. The only storage devices suitable for file-sharing were on the server: a floppy drive and a CD-ROM reader. The Apollo 845S model features two IDE channels, two serial ports, one parallel port, and two 12Mps USB ports, with the option of adding two more USB ports, a 52X CD-ROM, six 32 bit PCI slots, onboard audio, 10/100 ethernet, Windows Me operating system, floppy drive, keyboard and mouse. |
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