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  2. Target Disk Mode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Target_Disk_Mode

    A Mac booted in Target Mode can be attached to the port of any other computer, Mac or PC, where it will appear as an external device. Hard drives within the target Mac, for example, can be formatted or partitioned exactly like any other external drive.

  3. Disk Utility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_Utility

    Another application called Drive Setup was used for drive formatting and partitioning and the application Disk Copy was used for working with disk images. [citation needed] Before Mac OS X Panther, the functionality of Disk Utility was spread across two applications: Disk Copy and Disk Utility. Disk Copy was used for creating and mounting disk ...

  4. List of Apple drives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Apple_drives

    A list of all Apple internal and external drives in chronological order of introduction. Floppy disk drives Disk II ... Apple MacBook Air SuperDrive; Other drives

  5. Core Storage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Core_Storage

    Core Storage is the basis for Apple's Fusion Drive technology, [2] which presents several partitions on multiple drives as a single logical volume. It does this by using tiered storage , whereby it keeps the most frequently used blocks on the fastest storage device in the pool, which is, by default, an SSD.

  6. Disk formatting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disk_formatting

    A block, a contiguous number of bytes, is the minimum unit of storage that is read from and written to a disk by a disk driver.The earliest disk drives had fixed block sizes (e.g. the IBM 350 disk storage unit (of the late 1950s) block size was 100 six-bit characters) but starting with the 1301 [8] IBM marketed subsystems that featured variable block sizes: a particular track could have blocks ...

  7. Data recovery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Data_recovery

    The most common data recovery scenarios involve an operating system failure, malfunction of a storage device, logical failure of storage devices, accidental damage or deletion, etc. (typically, on a single-drive, single-partition, single-OS system), in which case the ultimate goal is simply to copy all important files from the damaged media to another new drive.

  8. Apple File System - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apple_File_System

    Apple File System was announced at Apple's developers’ conference (WWDC) in June 2016 as a replacement for HFS+, which had been in use since 1998. [11] [12] APFS was released for 64-bit iOS devices on March 27, 2017, with the release of iOS 10.3, and for macOS devices on September 25, 2017, with the release of macOS 10.13.

  9. SuperDrive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SuperDrive

    Internal SuperDrive floppy drive on a Macintosh LC II. The term was first used by Apple Computer in 1988 to refer to their 1.44 MB 3.5 inch floppy drive.This replaced the older 800 KB floppy drive that had been standard in the Macintosh up to then, but remained compatible [citation needed] in that it could continue to read and write both 800 KB (double-sided) and 400 KB (single-sided) floppy ...