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Page Title: ORGANIZING DATA ON DISKS
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TOPIC 1—FUNDAMENTALS OF MAGNETIC DISKS AND DISKS DRIVES
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Figure 10-1.—A magnetic disk pack. several gigabytes. An example of a disk pack is shown in figure 10-1. Disk cartridges are another form of disk pack with the   heads   and   head   actuator   assemblies   contained within a sealed cartridge. Since the disk pack is never removed from the cartridge, disk cartridges suffer less contamination    problems    from    dust    and    dirt    than standard disk packs. FIXED  DISKS.  —Fixed  disks  are  small  sealed units that contain one or more disk platters. Fixed disks are known by several terms, such as Winchester drive, hard drive, or fixed disk. For clarity, we refer to them as fixed disks throughout this chapter. Fixed disks are used in minicomputers and personal computers. They can  also  be  adapted  for  use  in  mainframe  computers instead of having separate disk file units. Floppy Disks Floppy  disks  come  in  several  sizes  and  densities. They  are  called  floppy  disks  because  the  magnetic coating is placed on a thin flexible polyester film base. THE   8-INCH   FLOPPY   DISK.   —The   8-inch floppy    disk    was    the    first    disk    widely    used    for commercial purposes. It is available as both single- or double-sided and single- or double density. The 8-inch disk is quickly becoming obsolete. THE 5.25-INCH FLOPPY DISK. —The 5.25- inch   floppy   disks   are   used   with   both   personal computers and minicomputers. The standard double-sided, double-density disk has a capacity of 360 kilobytes  (K).   Quad-density   disks   hold   720K,   while   the newest high-density disks can hold 1.2 megabytes (M). THE  3.5-INCH  FLOPPY  DISK.  —The  current disk of choice is the 3.5-inch floppy disk. These disks are also used with personal computers and minicomputers.     These     smaller     disks     have     data capacities of 720K for double-density disks and 1.44M for high-density disks. ORGANIZING DATA ON DISKS Before data  can be  stored  on  a  magnetic  disk,  the disk must first be divided into numbered areas so the data  can be  easily  retrieved.  Dividing  the  disk  so  the data  can  be  easily  written  and  retrieved  is  known  as formatting the disk. The format program divides each data surface into tracks and sectors. Tracks   —Concentric    rings,    called    tracks,    are written   on   the   disk   during   the   formatting   process. Floppy disks have 40 or 80 tracks per side. Fixed disks and disk packs can have from 300 to over 1,000 tracks per side. Figure 10-2 shows an example of how tracks are written on a disk surface. Each track is assigned a number.  The  outermost  track  on  a  disk  is  assigned number 00. The innermost track is assigned the highest consecutive number. Sectors —Each track is divided into sectors. Sectors are numbered divisions of the tracks designed to make data  storage  more  manageable.  Without  sectors,  each track would hold more than 4,500 bytes of information and small files would use an entire track. Figure 10-2.—Tracks on a segment of a magnetic disk. 10-3

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