Computers made today generally do not have any floppy drives at all.
PCs traditionally had 2 floppy drives (A: and B:) but might have only one of these.
The original Mac had 1 floppy drive.
Early microcomputers could frequently have as many as 4 floppy drives. (I had one with this capability but I never connected more than 3 floppy drives, these were 8 inch double sided double density drives).
240 hard drives, 20 floppy drives and 40 CD-ROM drives.
Hard Drives, CDs, Floppy disks, USB drives.
The space inside the computer for DVD/CD/Floppy(who uses these anymore?) Drives and also Solid State Drives (SSD) and Hard Drives.
My computer has all of your drives in your computer in the My Computer files. This can be accessed by going to start, my computer. Then you should see different drives like your hardware drives. Here you can access your program files and any floppy or USB drives you put into your computer.
Computer floppy disks and drives.
None of the above.
Normally a floppy drive interface can be used to connect two floppy disk drives. However this may vary from system to system, some systems may also have two interfaces. It may be necessary to purchase a floppy drive cable with two connection headers.
because in the IBM PC drives a and b were dedicated to floppy drives.
normally RAM and H drives are on most computers. other just use there flash drives or floppy disks
Hard drive, Disk drive and FLoppy disk drive
Because A and B are reserved for floppy drives.
drive B