Floppy disk drives, or just floppy disks. Nothing special.
Drive A or Drive B as the hard disk was usually Drive C
Zip drive, floppy capacity is usually only ~1.4GB
Yes, in the BIOS settings, you may need to change the drive type for a floppy disk if you are using a floppy disk drive. This involves configuring the settings to ensure the BIOS correctly recognizes the type of floppy drive connected, such as 3.5" or 5.25". If you're not using a floppy drive, you can usually disable it in the BIOS to improve boot times and resource allocation.
By buying a floppy drive. You can buy an external USB floppy drive for under $50.
THE FLOPPY DRIVE THE FLOPPY DRIVE
A pile of other floppy drives because they are completely redundant these days, but still have their uses from time to time, usually for boot based repairs.
The common name for the data cables used on floppy drives is "floppy ribbon cable." These cables typically have a flat, multi-conductor design and connect the floppy drive to the computer's motherboard. They usually feature a 34-pin connector for the floppy drive interface.
The OS is a program. The computer has the floppy drive.
Typically, the A drive is the floppy drive; the C drive is the hard drive; and the D drive is the CD drive.
in a floppy drive, a small pin hits the area where that little switch is on the floppy. if it passes through, the floppy drive detects the floppy as write/read. it it doesn't pass through, the floppy drive detects the floppy as read only
A computer floppy drive is the device that reads and writes to a floppy disk. It is located on the front of the Computer.
Usually, you will just need to insert the floppies into the floppy disk drive on a computer. If your computer does not have a floppy drive (most made since 2003 don't), you will need to purchase an external floppy drive. These connect to your computer through a USB port. After you plug it in and insert a disk, you should be able to find the drive and view your pictures.