Maxtor QUICKVIEW 300 User Manual

Page 68

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Glossary

G-4

Quickview 300

80/100/120/160/200/250/300GB PATA

G

GIGABYTE (GB)

– One billion bytes (one

thousand megabytes).

GUIDE RAILS

– Plastic strips attached to

the sides of a disk drive mounted in an IBM
AT and compatible computers so that the
drive easily slides into place.

H

HALF HEIGHT

– Term used to describe a

drive that occupies half the vertical space of
the original full size 5 1/4-inch drive. 1.625
inches high.

HARD DISK

– A type of storage medium

that retains data as magnetic patterns on a rigid
disk, usually made of an iron oxide or alloy
over a magnesium or aluminum platter.
Because hard disks spin more rapidly than
floppy disks, and the head flies closer to the
disk, hard disks can transfer data faster and
store more in the same volume.

HARD ERROR

– A repeatable error in disk

data that persists when the disk is reread,
usually caused by defects in the media surface.

HEAD

– The tiny electromagnetic coil and

metal pole piece used to create and read back
the magnetic patterns (write and read
information) on the media.

HIGH-CAPACITY DRIVE

– By industry

conventions typically a drive of 1 gigabytes or
more.

HIGH-LEVEL FORMATTING

Formatting performed by the operating
system’s format program. Among other
things, the formatting program creates the
root directory and file allocation tables. See
also low-level formatting.

HOME

– Reference position track for

re-calibration of the actuator, usually the
outer track (track 0).

HOST ADAPTER

– A plug-in board that

forms the interface between a particular type
of computer system bus and the disk drive.

I

INITIALIZE

– See low level formatting.

INITIATOR

– A SCSI device that requests

another SCSI device to perform an operation.
A common example of this is a system
requesting data from a drive. The system is the
initiator and the drive is the target.

INTERFACE

– A hardware or software

protocol, contained in the electronics of the
disk controller and disk drive, that manages
the exchange of data between the drive and
computer.

INTERLEAVE

– The arrangement of

sectors on a track. A 1:1 interleave arranges
the sectors so that the next sector arrives at the
read/write heads just as the computer is ready
to access it. See also interleave factor.

INTERLEAVE FACTOR

– The number

of sectors that pass beneath the read/write
heads before the next numbered sector
arrives. When the interleave factor is 3:1, a
sector is read, two pass by, and then the next
is read. It would take three revolutions of the
disk to access a full track of data. Maxtor
drives have an interleave of 1:1, so a full track
of data can be accessed within one revolution
of the disk, thus offering the highest data
throughput possible.

INTERNAL DRIVE

– A drive mounted

inside one of a computer’s drive bays (or a
hard disk on a card, which is installed in one
of the computer’s slots).

J

JUMPER

– A tiny box that slips over two

pins that protrude from a circuit board. When
in place, the jumper connects the pins
electrically. Some board manufacturers use
Dual In-Line Package (DIP) switches instead
of jumpers.

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