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Reading (AR)

HARD DISK DRIVE TECHNOLOGY


A few years ago, a query about the health of a person's hard disk drive would have been met with a blank stare. Nowadays, almost everyone is aware of this remarkable electronic storage medium that is part of every modern computer, even though most users remain ignorant of the complexity of hard drive technology.
IELTS Reading Sample 30
In the early days of computing, an information record of a computer' s memory content was kept on punched cards similar to the way in which an automated piano stores the keynote sequences on a piano roll. Later, magnetic tape was used to store electronic signals and is still the favoured means of economically backing up the contents of hard drives. However, accessing information sequentially stored on tape is slow since the electronic data must be input through a fixed head in a single pass.

Hard disk drives solve this problem by incorporating a spinning platter on which magnetic data can be made accessible via a moving head that reads and writes information across the width of the disk. It is analogous to the way in which a person can choose to play a particular track on a CD player by causing the arm to move the head across the disk. The CD player is, in fact, necessarily similar in design to a hard drive, although there are significant differences in speed of data access.

Most modern hard drives incorporate several platters to further reduce the time spent seeking the required information. Also, some newer drives have two heads; one for reading, and a second head for writing data to disk. This separation of tasks enables much higher densities of magnetic information to be written on the platter, which increases the capacity of the hard drive.

There are three important ways in which the capacity of hard disks has been increased. First, the data code itself has been tightened with express coding techniques. Second, as previously noted, the head technology has been improved; and third, the distance between the heads and the platters has been greatly reduced. It is hard to believe, but the head can be made to pass over the magnetised platter at distances of less than 1 microinch (the width of a typical human hair is 5000 microinches). This is achieved by means of a special protective coating applied to the platter. Each of these three improvements enables speedier access to the data.

As the Internet becomes ever more pervasive, and the speed of access to other machines increases across our telephone lines, it might be possible to do away with local storage systems altogether.

Glossary: 

backing up -- duplicating

sequential(ly) -- in sequence (or one after the other)

platter -- circular disk or plate

Streaming data -- sending or broadcasting information as data


Questions 1-3

You are advised to spend about 5 minutes on Questions 1-3.

Refer to Reading Passage "Hard Disk Drive Technology" and the diagram below.
Choose from the words and phrases in the given list, and label the diagram with the correct name of each part of the hard drive.

Write your answers in boxes 1-3 on your Answer Sheet. The first one has been done for you as an example.

Note that you will not need to use every word or phrase in the list.

                                         List of Parts:

CD player              second head                         magnetic tape
moving head          date code                              platter
electric current      special protective coating



Refer to Reading Passage "Hard Disk Drive Technology", and decide which of the answers best completes the following sentences. Write your answers in boxes 4-8 on your Answer Sheet.

The first one has been done for you as an example.

Example: Nowadays, hard disk drive technology is:
a) less complex
(b) part of every modern computer
c) expensive
d) not difficult to understand

4). Magnetically-coated disks are one of many types of:
a) sequential access information systems
b) information storage solutions
c) tape storage solutions
d) CD players

5) Connecting a hard drive incorrectly usually:
          a) results in an excess temperature
          b) erodes the magnetised material on the platters
          c) damages the keyboard or mouse
          d) destroys the drive

6) Keyboard or mouse use can easily cause:
         a) incorrect electrical currents
         b) the magnetised coating on the platter to wear out
         c) physical damage to the hard disk drive
         d) none of the above

7) In the future, a computer user might be able to access personal data files from:
         a) a central storage unit
         b) a local hard drive
         c) a software program
         d) the local bank

8) Centralised banks of storage information could: 
        a) offer better protection of a user's data files
        b) stream data across telephone lines
        c) means the end of local storage systems
        d) all of the above

Questions 9-12

You are advised to spend about 8 minutes on Questions 9-12

The following text is a summary of part of Reading Passage.

Complete each gap in the text by choosing the best phrase from the box below the summary.

Write your answers in boxes 9-12 on your Answer Sheet.

Note that there are more phrases to choose from that are required. The first one has been done for you as an example.

Hard disk drives are exceedingly complex and fragile pieces of equipment, but ......... (Ex:)........ The cheapest way to store computer information is .......(9)....... However, it is slow to read back stored information in this way. .......(10)......., on the other hand, consists of one or more spinning platters coated with magnetised material holding data made accessible by two moving heads. Modern advances in disk technology have increased the .......(11)......... of hard disks. This has been accomplished ......(12).......

A.  storage capacity
B.  on magnetic tape
C.  most computer users know that a hard disk drive is complex
D.   a CD player is faster than a disk drive
E.  A hard disk drive
F.  few computer users are aware of this
G.  in three ways
H.  cost
I.  increasing the size of the platters used
J.  size of the heads








Answer: 

1. second head
2. platter
3. special protective coating
4. b
5. d
6. d
7. a
8. d 
9. B
10. E
11. A
12. G

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