No, cellular phones do not contain hard drives. They do have internal memory but they have a different type of setup than a computer. Some cellphones even take memory cards.
Titanium is not commonly used in hard drives. The main components of hard drives are typically aluminum, steel, and various types of metal alloys. Titanium is known for its strength and corrosion resistance, making it more suitable for applications like aerospace, medical implants, and sports equipment.
Hard water contain calcium bicarbonate, magnesium bicarbonate in temporary hard water and calcium/magnesium sulfate in permanent hard water. Soft water contain doesn't contain these substances or only in very limited concentations.
Hard drives, speakers, electric motors, many things.
No. The only parts that deal with magnetism are some kinds of storage, such as floppy disks, traditional hard drives, and tape libraries. However, some desktops and laptops are now shipping with SSD storage and are completely unaffected by most magnetism. Extremely strong magnetic fields are capable of interfering with any electrical system, however.
Some common utilities for partitioning hard drives include Disk Management (Windows), Disk Utility (Mac), and GParted (Linux). These utilities allow you to create, resize, delete, and format partitions on your hard drive.
NO, cell phones contin a cpu, input and output devices but no hard drive
A rugged cellular device is not hard to do. Try contacting your wireless cellular phone company for advice on buying a rugged cell phone. www.info4cellphones.com is a website that provides information about all cellular phones.
A processor does not contain any hard drives. A hard drive and processor are separate pieces of hardware.
The top four brands of 1TB Hard Drives are amongst others Western Digital hard drives, Seagate hard drives, Toshiba hard drives, and Hitachi hard drives.
HP does. They make, cell phones, computers, cameras, accessories for the computer and camera such as flash drives, external and portable hard drives, memory cards, TVs. Pretty much all things similar to that except home phones.
I doubt it. Most "Smart Phones," the iPhone included, do not have Hard Drives, granted they have Windows. But the version of Windows in Smart Phones is specifically made for mobile phones, not for computers.
Yes, they are called Solid State Drives (SSD). These drives use contain no moving parts and use memory chips for data storage.
Hard disk drives
How are Hard drives indentified and what are their functions
Mac laptops may likely have solid state drives (not hard drives). Those drives are 2.5" form factor and can be replaced by hard drives.
Hard drives last for many years
if your talking about cardbus/pcmcia then yes. small hard drives are available but are pretty much obsolete now