The Stockholm CD boxes from the Container Store can hold up to 20 CDs in jewel cases. These containers are sturdy however, and can hold products other than CDs as well.
On shelves, in refrigeration, in boxes, on magnetic disks, in cupboards etc.
True.
Magnetic Disks, otherwise known as 'Floppy disks'. The last generation of these disks were 3 1/2" and used a ridgid plastic case, to contain the magnetic disk within. Not very floppy. The early versions were 7" and 5" and were contained in soft plastic outer sleeves. These were actually floppy.
Pits and lands
Yes. Many of the first digital cameras stored their photos on floppy disks. A floppy disk may not be able to store a very high resolution image, however.
You should have the instillation disks that came with your computer. You saved them didn't you? Get them out and reinstall them. If you did not save them, you will need to go to a store and purchase new system disks. That will teach you to save the original instillation disks.
A storage device is any computer hardware meant to store data permanently or semi-permanently. This includes, but is not limited to hard disks, floppy disks, cdroms and DVDs.
Floppy disks use magnetic disk to store the data.
Same as hard top. You use the sperate handle, (check the glove boxes), that slides into the slot on the 2 round disks that rotate and either tighten or loosens the front of it. The disks have a screw like mechanisim with a prong that aligns it.
Yes, thousands or hundreds of thousands of times more.
You buy the disks from a game store and you put them in and they should start downloading
solid state