Tiscali Quicklinks. Please visit our Accessibility Page for a list of the Access Keys you can use to find your way around the site, skip directly to the main navigation, to the page content, or to more links within reference.
Magnetic disks come in several forms: fixed hard disks are built into the disk-drive unit, occasionally stacked on top of one another. A fixed disk cannot be removed: once it is full, data must be deleted in order to free space or a complete new disk drive must be added to the computer system in order to increase storage capacity. Arrays of such disks are also used to store minicomputer and mainframe data in RAID storage systems, replacing large fixed disks and removable hard disks.
Removable hard disks are still found in mid-range and large (mainframe) computer systems. The disks are contained, individually or as stacks (disk packs), in a protective plastic case, and can be taken out of the drive unit and kept for later use. By swapping such disks around, a single hard-disk drive can be made to provide a potentially infinite storage capacity. However, access speeds and capacities tend to be lower that those associated with large, fixed hard disks. A floppy disk (or diskette) is a most common form of backing store for microcomputers, although it is increasingly being replaced by the higher capacity and more robust memory stick or pen-drive or other back-up devices. The floppy disk is much smaller in size and capacity than a hard disk, normally holding 0.52 megabytes of data. The floppy disk is so called because it is manufactured from thin flexible plastic coated with a magnetic material. The earliest form of floppy disk was packaged in a card case and was easily damaged; subsequent versions are contained in a smaller, rigid plastic case and are much more robust. All floppy disks can be removed from the drive unit.
Green stands for Nigeria's forests and agriculture. White represents the River Niger, peace, and unity. Effective date: 1 October 1960.
>>