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A SATA drive is a drive that uses the Serial Advanced Technology Attachment interface. It typically is an internal drive, but not always. It typically stores a large amount of information and is not portable. A flash drive, on the other hand, is a portable external drive that uses the USB interface. Its main advantage is its portability, not its capacity.
The interface you are looking for is called a GUI (Graphical User Interface). This interface is supported by all Microsoft Windows Operating System's.
The drive interface that uses an 80-conductor ribbon cable is IDE. IDE stands for Integrated Drive Electronics, an interface commonly used to connect hard disks and optical drives to computers.
Some of them do. Your CD-ROM and hard drive can have molex power connector, or/and SATA power connecter. I think SCSI interface uses molex power connectors too.
Although both Windows and OSX have built in command line interfaces, the default interface uses little pictures or icons that have underlying commands that the user need not know. This type of interface is a Graphical User Interface, or GUI.
EIDE cable uses a 40-pin connector at the end of the cable to interface with the drive.
Graphical User Interface
ATAPI (Advanced Technology Attachment Packet Interface) standard
SATA (Serial ATA) is a type of interface. It's a format of cable and socket that connects hard drives and optical drives to the motherboard. The main purpose of SATA was to provide a faster interface to hard drives to replace the aging ATA interface. It also uses much thinner cables which help with cable routing and airflow. Pretty much every new consumer hard drive uses some form of SATA to connect to the motherboard.
Open drive.
That would be a solid state hard drive, or SSHD.
XBoard serves and user interface for chess engines and chess game served on internet. it runs in one to four major modes in any interface. keyboard and mouse is used as a medium to play in this type of game.