Answers to computer questions

Question:
What is the difference between a double density (DD) diskette, and a high density (HD) diskette?

Answer:
The terms high density and double density are pretty confusing. A high density diskette can store 1.44 MB after being formatted. (It can hold about 2.0 MB before being formatted.) A double density diskette can only hold 720K of data, or half that of a high density diskette. Sometimes, high density diskettes are referred to as HD/DD, which makes the difference a little more obvious. Double density diskettes are pretty much obsolete now, and it looks like HD diskettes are soon to follow.

Category: Storage
Date Entered: 1999-10-05


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