Assuming you mean a data-storage device (for use with computers) then the most clear cut answer would be a CD-ROM or a DVD-ROM, neither of which have any moving parts by themselves. The disc-reader however would have moving parts which may negate the idea of a stationary storage device.
Flash memory is another form of storage which is commonly found in USB drives and small electronics. It has no moving parts.
solid state devices as in thumbdrives any stick memory
With hard disks becoming just another storage device there is a thing called a thumb drive or a USB drive or even a Memory stick which is a small stick of RAM used outside of the computer
A flash memory device such as a USB or SD card or an SSD (Solid State Storage) device
flash drives
A flash drive, also called a thumb drive.
to connect multiple storage devices for redundancy or speed
to connect storage devices such as hard disk drives to a PC
SANs. (Storage Area Networks.)
An example of a storage area network is IBM DS4500. The main purpose of a SAN is to connect to different types of data storage devices.
It is neither. In addition to input devices and output devices, there are devices called storage devices. The hard drive of a computer is a storage device: it contains the operating system and any data or program files used by the computer.
The "tower" part of a computer contains most of the computer. It is the cabinet that contains input and output devices, as well as storage devices. However, collectively speaking, the label of "processing device" would be more accurate. Or you can say it is an I/O and processing device with storage.
Schools are typically vulnerable to cyberattacks in areas where computing devices are allowed to connect to the schoolβs network, internet, or to external storage devices.
Yes, some routers allow sharing USB storage over network without connecting the storage to a computer. You connect USB storage directly to the router and using router's setting you can setup permissions and access list for your storage.
memory card, like SD or Memory Stick
A storage area network (SAN) can be described as a separate network of storage devices that are physically removed from, but still connected to, the main enterprise network. SANs evolved from the concept of taking storage devices and storage traffic off the LAN and creating a separate back-end network specifically designed for data.In essence, A SAN is a separate network to handle storage needs. The SAN decouples storage tasks from specific servers and creates a shared storage facility across a high-speed network. The collection of networked storage devices can include hard disks, tape libraries, and CD arrays.In traditional client server LANs, data were stored on devices (typically disk drives) inside or directly attached to the server. Network Attached Storage (NAS) systems were the next step in the evolution of LAN storage systems. NAS separated storage devices from the server and connected them directly to the network. SANs go one step further by allowing storage devices to exist on their own separate network and communicate directly with each other over very fast interfaces. Users access these storage devices via servers that are connected to both the LAN and the SAN. The SAN arrangement improves client-to-storage access efficiency, as well as direct storage-to-storage communications for backup and replication functions.
there is no difference!
Some devices do not contain storage devices, or do not have enough storage space needed by a particular user. Extra storage devices such as an external hard drive can be utilized.