No. That is a low average for modern hard drives. 300 to 500 GB hard drives are increasingly the norm in consumer computers, and 1.5 TB drives are available.
A 120GB HDD hard disk is considerably ok for a computer. However, here in my country, computer sold out there all have an average of about 160GB hard disk. If you do not need a lot of storage space, it is quite fine. It would be better if you have a high GHz and a big RAM, so that your computer doesnt lag so much.
10cm
a big one
Depends on how big your hard drive is.
There are two ways: Research Disk Striping or RAID.
I'm not sure what you mean. If you mean 8 gigabyte Hard disk, yes, that's sufficient. If you mean 8.75 RAM, maybe. RAM and Hard disk are different things. RAM is memory that is volatile - it's deleted when you switch your computer off. The hard disk is non-volatile: It stays there forever, until you delete it.
When any hard disk is initialised one of the things that will happen is the number and size of partitions is calculated and created. The size of the disk and the operating system will be a big factor on how many and what size are the partititions
Big Blue Disk ended in 1998.
Big Blue Disk was created in 1986.
It depends...when you see a hot girl... Your floppy disk might turn into a hard drive which is really big, but then it depends :)
It depends on which one you bought. There are three kinds though and they are 20GB, 60GB, and the 120GB.
One of the best rated external hard drives is the LaCie Little Big Disk Thunderbolt (1TB SSD), but its also very expensive. The price tag is around 1000$