Non-magnetic storage media include:
CDs, DVDs, Laserdiscs, and Blu-Ray (optical)
NAND, Flash, and SD devices (thumb drives, SD cards, and Solid State drives)
RAM drives and SRAM (Static RAM)
RFID and similar radio-cards (typically read-only)
EEPROM and other reprogrammable data, such as Firmware (electronic)
If we want to get oldschool, it can also include Punch Cards (optical)
Magnetic storage optical storage solid-state storage storage capacity
Yes, storage media can be damaged by magnetic and electric fields. Strong magnetic fields can disrupt the data stored on magnetic media such as hard drives and floppy disks. Electric fields can cause data corruption in electronic storage devices like solid-state drives and flash drives. It is important to keep storage media away from strong magnetic and electric fields to prevent damage.
Nope. Flash drives don't use magnetic storage.
Audio
Magnetic storage media are items like floppy and hard disk drives. They are based on magnetic transfer of data between the heads and the computer.
Magnetic
One storage device is RAM. Also Magnetic Media, Flash Media, and Optical media. Your welcome :)
magnetic tape
A magnetic tape is a secondary storage media used to access data in a sequential way
it is the primary storage unit of a computer
Hard disk
Maximum storage magnetic media refers to storage devices that utilize magnetic properties to store data, such as hard disk drives (HDDs) and magnetic tapes. These media can achieve significant data capacities, with modern HDDs reaching up to 20 terabytes (TB) or more, while magnetic tape systems can exceed 30 TB per cartridge. The technology behind these media allows for high-density data storage, making them suitable for large-scale data archiving and backup solutions. However, they are generally slower than solid-state drives (SSDs) in terms of data access speeds.