Posts Tagged ‘Hard Drives’

JBOD

Monday, January 19th, 2009

Just a Bunch of Disks or Just a Bunch of Drives.

This is a RAID term that basically means drive spanning.  One large virtual drive is creates from two or more physical drives.  A user may create a large 1TB virtual drive out of several smaller hard drives…

2 x 500GB drives
1 x 500GB drive + 2 x 250GB drives
10 x 100GB drives

…or any other combination.  Data is written to one drive until it runs out of space, and then data is written to the next drive. 

There is no redundancy in a JBOD array, so if one drive fails then you may lose all of your data on the array, or just the data on that drive, depending on the quality of your RAID controller.

Boot Disk

Friday, December 12th, 2008

A boot disk is actually not a computer disk in the shape of a boot. If it was, most disk drives would have a difficult time reading it. Instead, a boot disk is a disk that a computer can start up or “boot” from. The most common type of boot disk is an internal hard drive, which most computers use to start up from. The operating system installed on the hard drive is loaded during the boot process.

However, most computers allow you to boot from other disks, including external Firewire hard drives, CD-ROMs, DVD-ROMs, and floppy disks. In order to function as boot disks, these disks need to have an operating system installed that is understandable by the computer. This can either be a full-blown operating system like Windows or Mac OS X, or a small utility operating system, such as Norton Utilities or DiskWarrior.

CD and DVD boot disks are often used to start up a computer when the operating system on the internal hard drive won’t load. This can happen when bad data blocks or other errors occur on the disk. By running a disk repair utility from the CD or DVD, you can often fix the hard drive and restart from it, using the full operating system.

BIOS

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Stands for “Basic Input/Output System.” Most people don’t need to ever mess with the BIOS on a computer, but it can be helpful to know what it is. The BIOS is a program pre-installed on Windows-based computers (not on Macs) that the computer uses to start up. The CPU accesses the BIOS even before the operating system is loaded. The BIOS then checks all your hardware connections and locates all your devices. If everything is OK, the BIOS loads the operating system into the computer’s memory and finishes the boot-up process.

Since the BIOS manages the hard drives, it can’t reside on one, and since it is available before the computer boots up, it can’t live in the RAM. So where can this amazing, yet elusive BIOS be found? It is actually located in the ROM (Read-Only Memory) of the computer. More specifically, it resides in an eraseable programmable read-only memory (EPROM) chip. So, as soon as you turn your computer on, the CPU accesses the EPROM and gives control to the BIOS.

The BIOS also is used after the computer has booted up. It acts as an intermediary between the CPU and the I/O (input/output) devices. Because of the BIOS, your programs and your operating system don’t have to know exact details (like hardware addresses) about the I/O devices attached to your PC. When device details change, only the BIOS needs to be updated. You can make these changes by entering the BIOS when your system starts up. To access the BIOS, hold down the key as soon as your computer begins to start up.

ATA (Advanced Technology Attachment)

Friday, December 12th, 2008

Stands for “Advanced Technology Attachment.” It is a type of disk drive that integrates the drive controller directly on the drive itself. Computers can use ATA hard drives without a specific controller to support the drive. The motherboard must still support an ATA connection, but a separate card (such as a SCSI card for a SCSI hard drive) is not needed. Some different types of ATA standards include ATA-1, ATA-2 (a.k.a. Fast ATA), ATA-3, Ultra ATA (33 MBps maximum transfer rate), ATA/66 (66 MBps), and ATA/100 (100 MBps).

The term IDE, or “Integrated Drive Electronics,” is also used to refer to ATA drives. Sometimes (to add extra confusion to people buying hard drives), ATA drives are labeled as “IDE/ATA.” Technically, ATA uses IDE technology, but the important thing to know is that they refer to the same thing.