Tracks.
The pie-shaped sections are called sectors.
Groups of sectors make up a cluster.
tracks
rings
true
Track on afloppy disc
Clusters are the smallest segments within disk sectors.Tracks are concentric circles on the hard drive.Pie-shaped wedges on the hard drive are called sectors.Platters are round, thin plates of metal that make up a hard drive.
The road is called Campus Drive.
Tracks
Each side, or surface, of one hard drive platter is called a head. Windows Vista technology that supports a hybrid drive is called ready drive.
drive in circles, and go fast.
Don't open it up and pound on the shiny things inside with a sledgehammer.Don't immerse it in salt water for several weeks.Don't draw concentric circles on it and use it for target practice.There are any number of other correct answers.As technically true as those answers may be, they aren't the one you're looking for, A+ pursuers.The answer you need is "write anything to" the drive.
No you cannot. Japan is an island on the other side of earth. If you drive in circles on a boat then yes
compass needs to be recalibrated
Nail sets are also called a nail punch. They are used to drive the head of a nail flush with the surface or below the surface.
Based on my knowledge and some research, I say spiral track. I say that since a CD drive uses a laser to read data (that's what I thought and people told me), if it went in concentric circles, then the laser would have to quickly turn off then turn on as it skipped to the next circle. To keep the data flowing to the processor (or wherever it goes, I'm just using logic), it would have to write data on a CD in a spiral track as the laser moved inward to read the data. To me, that's the most logical answer.