mass
magnetic
Most modern computers do not have any floppy drives at all. Ones made before 2001 generally had one. Two floppy drives was common only in very old computers with no fixed storage device.
Some are, not many however.
Not in a computer that featured a floppy drive as standard. Computers with floppy drives (4 years old or older) used 34-pin connectors for the floppies and 40-pin (PATA or IDE) cables for the hard drives. Modern computers use Serial ATA, and some SATA floppy drives are available, but they are not common.
Data storage devices.
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).
Some examples are hard drives, CD drives, DVD drives, flash drives, zip drives, and floppy drives
>> some are cds, hard disk, floppy disc, flash drives
Storage devices are different mediums that can hold varying amounts of information. Some examples of storage devices include CD, DVD, flash drives, floppy disks, and tape drives.
Examples of storage devices are: internal/external hard drives, floppy drives, CD's, DVD's, thumb drives, etc.
Bootable devices are pieces of hardware that the BIOS can load an operating system or special program off of. These can be floppy drives, CD drives, hard drives, USB flash drives, tape drives, SD cards, and certain ROM chips.
Hard disk drives, floppy discs, and VHS are some examples.