Computers use a variety of types of media, including hard disk drives, USB drives, CD-ROMS and DVDs. All are considered removable media except the hard disk drives, which typically are placed permanently inside the computer.
The hard drive would be considered both, as the media is not removable.
No, it isn't considered a removable media source.
Removable storage media refers to CD's, DVD's, Floppy discs, USB drives. Non-removeable storage media refers to RAM, and Hard Drives. So where the storage media's are found depends upon which you are 'talking' about; but generally non-removable inside the computer, removable outside of the computer.
removable storage media
A "diskette" or "floppy disk" is neither as they are removable magnetic storage media. However, if you refer to the drives that read from them or write to them, then those drives are considered hardware.
no you big fat poo bum
Yes.
Yes it is removable media. It can store all sorts of data, but can you remove it while the computer is still on? Yes, removable media is a part of a computer that can be removed while the computer is still running.
Removable Media means Portable media that you can put into a computer and remove like CDs, DVDs and Flash Drives. NON-removable media is like the HDD (hard disk drive) hope that helps
A "diskette" or "floppy disk" is neither as they are removable magnetic storage media. However, if you refer to the drives that read from them or write to them, then those drives are considered hardware.
C. Cac
CAC, or Common Access Card, is not considered removable media. It is a smart card used for identification and authentication within U.S. Department of Defense systems. While it can store data securely, it primarily functions as a credential rather than a storage device like USB drives or external hard drives. Thus, it serves a different purpose and is not classified as removable media.