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Foundations for Interactivity,

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Cartridge tape and DAT are used to back up data from a microcomputer hard disk ... Cartridge tape units. Yuh-Jzer Joung. Storage. The Future of Secondary Storage ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Foundations for Interactivity,


1
Storage
  • Foundations for Interactivity,
  • Multimedia, Knowledge

2
Storage
  • Primary Storage also known as main memory,
    internal memory, or RAM, is a working storage
    that holds
  • data for processing
  • instructions for processing the data
  • processed data that is waiting to be sent to an
    output or secondary-storage device
  • Secondary Storage consists of devices that store
    data and programs permanently on disk or tape.
    Secondary storage is nonvolatile that is, data
    are permanent, or remain intact when the power is
    turned off .

3
DATA HIERARCHY
  • Character a single letter , number , or special
    character such as _at_.
  • Field a unit of data consisting of one or more
    characters.
  • Record is a collection of related fields.
  • File a collection of related records.
  • Database a collection of interrelated files.

4
Compression And Decompression
  • Compression is a method of removing redundant
    elements from a computer file so that it requires
    less storage space.
  • Compression and decompression techniques are
    often called codec techniques.
  • The two principal compression techniques are
    lossless and lossy.
  • Lossless compression techniques achieve
    compression by avoiding repetition but still
    preserving every bit of data that was input.
  • Lossy compression techniques permanently
    discard some data during compression.

5
JPEG MPEG
  • Still images -- JPEG A lossy technique
  • The JPEG codec looks for a way to squeeze a
    single image , mainly by eliminating repetitive
    pixels, or picture element dots, within the
    image .
  • Moving images -- MPEG
  • MPEG1 Provides VHS-like quality of images.
  • MPEG2 Provides digital-TV-quality video for use
    with cable network.
  • MPEG4 For wireless videoconferencing.

6
Compression
7
Rating Secondary-Storage Devices
  • Storage capacity
  • Access time the average time needed to locate
    data on a secondary memory storage device.
  • Transfer rate the speed at which data is
    transferred from secondary storage to main
    memory.
  • Size
  • Cost

8
Diskettes
  • 31/2 inches The smaller size,now by far most
    common,is 31/2 inches across.
  • 51/4 inches The older and larger size is 5/14
    inches across.

9
Diskette Anatomy
10
Diskette drives
11
Characteristics of Diskettes
  • Tracks and sectors data is recorded in rings
    called tracks. Each track is divided into eight
    or nine sectors.
  • Data capacity
  • Side There are single-sided and double-sided
    capacity.
  • Density There are single, double, and
    high-density disk.
  • Unformatted and formatted disks Unformatted
    disks are manufactured without tracks and sectors
    in place. Formatting means that you must prepare
    the disk for use so that the operating system can
    write information on it .
  • Write-protect features It allows you to protect
    a diskette from being written to .

12
Removable High-Capacity Diskettes
  • EZ135
  • Zip 100MB
  • Jazz 1, 2 GB
  • MO 230MB, 640MB, 1.3GB
  • LS120 120MB

13
Hard-Disk Technology for Large Computer Systems
  • Removable packs This system contains several
    hard disks aligned one above the other in sealed
    unit. All tracks with the same track number,
    lined up one above the other, thus form a
    cylinder.
  • Fixed-disk drives They are high-speed,
    high-capacity disk drives that are housed in
    their own cabinets. Although not removable or
    portable, they generally have greater storage
    capacity and are more reliable than removable
    packs.
  • RAID (Redundant Array of Inexpensive Disks)
    storage system This system, which consists of
    several disk drives within a single cabinet,
    sends data to the computer along several parallel
    paths simultaneously.

14
Overview of RAID Levels
  • Level 0, striping striping data across multiple
    disks without any redundant information.
  • Level 1, data mirroring maintaining duplicate
    sets of all data on separate disk drives.
  • Level 3, Striping and Parity data is striped
    across a set of disks. In addition, parity is
    generated and stored on a dedicated disk.
  • Level 5, Striping and Parity both parity and
    data are striped across a set of disks.

15
Disk packs and cylinders
All tracks with the same track number,lined up
one above the order,thus form a cylinder.
16
Hard disks
17
Speeding Up Slow-Running Hard disk
  • Fragmentation
  • a data file becomes spread out across the hard
    disk in many noncontiguous clusters.
  • Defragmentation
  • data on the hard disk is reorganized so that data
    in each file is stored in contiguous clusters.

18
Power Portability
  • Miniaturization
  • External hard-disk drives
  • Hard-disk cartridges

19
Optical disks
20
Optical Disks
Optical disks are removable disks on which data
is written and read through the use or laser
beams.
  • CDROM can hold data up to 650MB, with a data
    transfer rate 150KB/sec single speed.
  • CD-R compact disk-recordable,cant be erased.
  • CD-RW compact disk rewritable.
  • WORM Disk write once, read many. A technology
    similar to CD-R, but is a bit older and more
    expensive.
  • DVD A single DVD (Digital Versatile Disk, was
    Digital Video Disk) can hold 4.7 GB on a single
    side, single layer disk. A double layer double
    side DVD can store 17GB data.

21
CD-ROMCompact disk read-only memory
  • Entertainment and games
  • Music,culture,and films
  • Encyclopedias,atlases,and reference works
  • Catalogs
  • Education and training
  • Edutainment
  • Books and magazines

22
Photo CD
  • A technology that allows photographs taken with
    an ordinary 35-millimeter camera to be stored
    digitally on an optical disk.

23
DVD DVD-ROM
  • More storage capacity, faster data transfer
  • Better audio
  • Better video
  • DVD-ROM and recordable and rewritable capabilities

24
Flash-memory Cards and Magnetic tape
  • Flash-memory cards consist of circuitry on
    credit-card-size cards that can be inserted into
    slots in a microcomputer.
  • Magnetic tape is thin plastic tape on which data
    can be represented with magnetized spots.
  • Cartridge tape and DAT are used to back up data
    from a microcomputer hard disk onto a tape
    cartridge.

25
Magnetic Tape
  • Representing data on magnetic tape
  • Magnetic-Tape units for large computers
  • Cartridge tape units

26
The Future of Secondary Storage
  • Advanced Compression Schemes
  • Wavelet compression
  • Fractal compression
  • Compression by object-oriented programming
  • compression using neural networks
  • CD-ROM Jukeboxes
  • Higher-Density Diskettes
  • Digital VCRs Video disk Players
  • Video Severs
  • Molecular ElectronicsStorage at the Subatomic
    Level

27
Three levels of multimedia specifications
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