Kreisen 3 8 6 X / X E User Manual

Page 60

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A disk is further divided by sectors. To understand what a

sector is, picture the spokes on a bicycle wheel radiating from
the center of the wheel to the tire. The space between one
spoke and the next is like a sector on a diskette. (See the figure

below.) Each track on a 1.2MB diskette has 15 sectors, and

each sector holds 512 bytes.

Figure 3-3. Sectors and Tracks

Your computer uses the read/write heads in a disk drive to store

and retrieve data on a disk. There is one head above the

diskette and one below, so the drive can write to both sides of

the diskette. To write to a disk, the computer spins it in the

drive to a position where one of the read/write heads can access

the diskette through the read/write slot. The read/write slot on

a diskette exposes the diskette’s magnetic surface so the

read/write head can write on the appropriate area.

Because data is stored magnetically, you can retrieve it, record

over it, and erase it — just as you play, record, and erase music

on a cassette tape.

Using Your Computer

3-7

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