The first place to look for that solution is the motherboard. Either search to see specifications by entering the model of the board you have of simply find the answer in the mother board manual. If you have a system from a manufacturer and are adding the second hard drive to an existing system, then the hard drive you currently are using can lead you to the type of acceptable drive.
I assume you want a way that would actually be a legitimate way of connecting a hard drive, as opposed to unnecessary silliness. SCSI controllers can be fairly expensive, most over $100.
100 Gigabytes worth of stuff
Depends on the type of wood and if it is green or dry and aged. 100 year old Oak is hard to drive a nail into.
You may upgrade your hard drive on a PS3. 160GB could be less than $100 depending on where you purchase it.
It all depends on the age of the PC. Assuming you won't want to spend 400+ for a new computer, then spending 50-100 for a new hard drive is worth it, as long as you don't mind spending the time to re-install all your software etc.
Approximately in the year of 2015
There are many brands of hard drives. Most are equal in quality and cost around $100.
A good computer that has 100 GB of hard drive is a sony vaio TZ Also the sony vaio TZ has..... Weight: 2.7 lbsBattery life: 4 to 7.5 hoursScreen size: 11.1''Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo (1.06 GHz)Hard Drive: 100 GBWireless LAN: 802.11 a/b/g/nPrice: $2,199.99*
External hard drives can cost a variety of prices. A good deal for an external hard drive would be anything under one hundred dollars. A good external hard drive can be purchased new for well under $100.
Approximately in the year of 2015
You can get by with around 100 GB if you work mostly with documents.If you have lots of music, video or computer games, you would want something larger - from 250 GB and up.
No,but you can get a really big one for between 65 and 100$.You just have to remember that you want an External USB 2.0 Hard Drive.You can also use one or two USB flash drives.