17 sectors
9 sectors
A floppy disk is about 5 MB big, so 5120 KB will fit on a floppy disk.
800,674,787.398,768,34.857,453.738.9
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AN 80GB drive will have about 78,125,000 sectors on each side.
A track on a storage device typically consists of multiple sectors. The exact number of sectors on a track can depend on the specifications of the device, but it is typically in the range of a few hundred to a few thousand sectors per track.
Yes, a floppy disk will be affected by a magnet. Many floppy disks have magnetic components so coming into contact with permanent magnets can damage them.
Calculated size of floppy disk to hold the data is 1.47 MB while the actual size of it is 1.44 MB the difference is of 0.03 MB.explain
The only floppy drive system commercially available today is the 3.5" floppy disk drive. Previously there were both 5.25" and 8.00" disks/drives also available for PC's.
HDD stands for Hard Disk Drive... FDD stands for Floppy Disk Drive...
A single side of a DVD-R has 2,294,922 data sectors for 12 cm disk. For an 8 cm disk the amount of sectors is 712,891.
For a standard IBM formatted double sided, high density 3.5" floppy diskette, the following properties apply:Data is recorded on two sides of the diskEach side has 80 tracksEach track has 18 sectorsEach sector holds 512 bytes (0.5 KB)So each floppy disk holds 2880 sectors (2 * 80 * 18), which total to 1440 KB.While often labeled as 1.44MB, this is not an accurate statement of a floppy disk's capacity. This is due to the confusion between binary and decimal, where K can be 1,024 or 1,000 and M can be 1,048,576 or 1,000,000.If calculated completely in binary, a floppy would hold 1.40625 MB, while if calculated completely in decimal, it would hold 1.47456 MB. Obviously marketing wouldn't like to use either of these numbers!But by doing the first half of the calculation in binary (getting 1440 KB), and then treating that as a decimal number and incorrectly converting it to 1.44 MB, you get an easy to read number.