Yes, it takes longer to load from a floppy disk.
Y
It works like our heart. Only it distributes correct voltages, not blood, to the different computer components (i.e. motherboard, CPU(s), RAM chips, floppy disks, hard disks, optical disc drives,...
It is faster to access RAM than the Hard Drive in a computer, this is why lots of RAM is good, as the computer can store more data on it that is being used so it can be accessed and thus run faster.
A diskette is a removable storage device that is used in a floppy disk drive. It contains a plastic rotating disk, it is inside a shell. There were 2 main varieties, the 5.25 inch floppy and the 3.5 inch floppy. The 5.25" diskette truly was floppy. The disk is soft and inside a flexible shell, and you had to take care to never bend it. The 3.25" floppy was actually hard. The platter was more rigid and it was in a hard plastic shell.
Yes. Just make sure its connected when you're using parallels. when you install an OS with parallels edit its installation location to the location in the external hard disc.
In order to use a floppy disc you need to have a floppy disc drive.These days most computers don't have them at all, as they are so old floppy discs are hard to find..and the maximum capacity of a floppy disc is only 1.44Mb. I recently tried to buy some , but I couldn't find any at 15 different computer shops
no the floppy disk rotate slower its because hard disk rotate faster then floppy disk
floppy disc. No, the above is incorrect. In a normal PC, your hard drive contains the most information.
From what I know, hard drives are faster.
The term "removable disc" can refer to any storage device that can be removed and reattached to the computer. ex. CD/DVD disc, flash drive, floppy, USB Hard drive, etc.
Because they are actually floppy disks of magnetic film. They don't seem floppy when you handle them because they're housed in a rigid plastic case that lets you slide them into your computer. That is if you still have a floppy drive on your computer.
Disc space is the amount of computer storage space on random-access memory devices, such as on a hard drive, floppy or USB flash drive. Free up disc space by running a disc clean-up, removing unused applications, and removing duplicate files.
Track on afloppy disc
>> some are cds, hard disk, floppy disc, flash drives
Its an old square disc. You must be around 14 years young!
Do you mean like a floppy disk, a CD, or a ZIP disk? You should be able to access them unless the files are protected in some way or if the files are corrupted. Does this help? If not, try re-posting your question with a more detailed description of what you want to know. Files downloaded to a hard drive remain on the hard drive of that computer, even if they are subsequently loaded on a CD or floppy disc. If that disc or floppy is opened using a separate computer, the information on the disc is read without involving the hard drive of the computer. No information from the disc is placed on the hard drive of the second computer unless saved to it. yes. you need some sort of interface, called an operating system to arbitrate the exchange of information. ex in dos: copy a:/ c:/ The simple thing to remember a disk,a floppy,a hard disk,DVD,CD,etc are all just storage devices. If something is "copyed" from hard disk to floppy disk then there will be the same data on both.If its "cut" from one and "pasted" to the other then the data will be on the one its pasted to and not on the one "cut" from. In order to access this data an operating system will be needed to read it.If the data was encrypted then the encryption software used will also be needed to decrypt the data again on the computer you are trying to read it.
a computer