Magnetic disk devices.
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Magnetic disks are flat circular plates of metal or plastic, coated on both sides with iron oxide. Input signals, which may be audio, video, or data, are recorded on the surface of a disk as magnetic patterns or spots in spiral tracks by a recording head while the disk is rotated by a drive unit. The heads, which are also used to read the magnetic impressions on the disk, can be positioned anywhere on the disk with great precision. For computer data-storage applications, a collection of as many as 20 disks (called a disk pack) is mounted vertically on the spindle of a drive unit. The drive unit is equipped with multiple reading/writing heads.
These features give magnetic disk devices an advantage over tape recorders. A disk unit has the ability to read any given segment of an audio or video recording or block of data without having to pass over a major portion of its content sequentially; locating desired information on tape may take many minutes. In a magnetic disk unit, direct access to a precise track on a specific disk reduces retrieval time to a fraction of a second.
Magnetic disk technology was applied to data storage in 1962. The random accessibility of data stored in disk units made these devices particularly suitable for use as auxiliary memories in high-speed computer systems. Small, flexible plastic disks called floppy disks were developed during the 1970s. Although floppy disks cannot store as much information as conventional disks or retrieve data as rapidly, they are adequate for applications such as those involving minicomputers and microcomputers where low cost and ease of use are of primary importance.
Magnetic disk recording has various other uses. Office dictating machines and transcribing units utilize the process for storing spoken messages for later use. Magnetic disk technology has also facilitated and improved a method known as “instant replay” that is widely used in live telecasts, especially of sports events. This method involves the immediate re-showing of, for example, a crucial play in a football game during a live-action broadcast. Videotape recorders were initially used for instant replay, but they proved too cumbersome. In 1967 Ampex developed a special videodisk machine that made it possible to locate and replay a desired action in less than four seconds.
Other magnetic recording devices.
Such magnetic recording mediums as drums and ferrite cores have been used for data storage since the early 1950s. A more recent development is the magnetic bubble memory devised in the late 1970s at Bell Telephone Laboratories.
Auxiliary computer memories using a magnetic drum operate somewhat like tape and disk units. They store data in the form of magnetized spots in adjacent circular tracks on the surface of a metal cylinder. A single drum may carry from one to 200 tracks. Data are recorded and read by heads positioned near the surface of the drum as the drum rotates at about 3,000 revolutions per minute. Drums provide rapid, random access to stored information. They are able to retrieve information faster than tape and disk units, but cannot store as much data as either of them.
Core memories use hundreds of thousands of magnetizable ferrite cores that resemble tiny doughnuts. Through each of the cores run two or more wires, which carry electrical currents that magnetize the cores in either a clockwise or counterclockwise direction. Cores magnetized in one direction are said to represent 0, and those in the opposite direction to represent 1. The 0 and 1 correspond to the digits of the binary system, the basis for digital computer operations. Data are stored by magnetizing an array of cores in a particular combination of 0s and 1s. Core storage units allow extremely fast, random access to stored information. Unlike other magnetic memory devices that have to wait for tape reels to unwind or drums to rotate, retrieval is performed simply by sending electrical pulses to the specific array of cores holding the desired data. The pulses reverse the direction of magnetization in the cores, which includes output signals corresponding to the stored data.
The magnetic bubble memory is more economical to operate than mechanical tape, disk, or drum units and is considerably more compact. The device consists of a chip of synthetic garnet about the size of a matchbook. It stores data in tiny cylindrically shaped magnetic domains called bubbles that appear and disappear under the control of an electromagnetic field. The presence and absence of the bubbles represent information in binary form in much the same way as do the two states of magnetic cores. As each tiny garnet chip accommodates hundreds of thousands of binary digits, enormous amounts of data can be stored in a memory unit comprised of a small stack of these chips.