diskettes
Diskettes, commonly known as floppy disks, are removable magnetic storage media used in computers from the 1970s through the early 2000s. A diskette consists of a thin flexible plastic disk coated with magnetic oxide, sealed inside a protective plastic shell. Data is stored as magnetic transitions on the surface and read by a read/write head inside a disk drive. Many diskettes include a write-protect notch to prevent accidental data revision.
The major sizes were 8-inch, 5.25-inch, and 3.5-inch. The 8-inch disks appeared in the 1970s and could
Use and formats: Diskettes were used to store and transfer software, documents, and backups. They required formatting
Decline and legacy: Floppy drives were largely supplanted by optical discs, USB flash drives, and networked