disks
Disks are non-volatile data storage devices that retain information without power. The term covers several technologies, most commonly magnetic disk drives, optical discs, and solid-state disks. While all disk types store bits persistently, they differ in how data is recorded, accessed, and where they are typically used. Disk storage remains a foundational form of secondary storage in computing, complementing faster solid-state memory and volatile system RAM.
Magnetic disks, or hard disk drives (HDDs), use spinning platters coated with a magnetic material. Data is
Optical discs, such as CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray discs, store data in tiny pits read by a
Solid-state disks (SSDs) use flash memory with no moving parts. They offer fast random access, low latency,
In practice, disk storage is managed through partitions, file systems, and, for redundancy, RAID or equivalent