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CD-RW, DVD and Other Removable Media Drives
You’ll certainly want a CD-RW
drive. This will let you play music CDs, install software which comes
on CDs, and back up your important information to CDs. The drive we
purchased is illustrated in Figure 21.
Figure 21: A CD-RW drive CD-RW and DVD drives are called 5.25” drives.

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Because hard drives
do occasionally fail, it’s important to back up all your important
information to some other media. Your information can be backed
up to another hard drive, a tape drive, or, most commonly for consumers,
a CD.
DVD drives are discussed in more
detail in another chapter. If you plan to produce videos, you’ll
want a DVD burner which will allow you to create your own DVD movies.
Most CD-RW and DVD drives are also
called IDE devices. They are also called internal devices, which means
they go inside the PC case. That’s the kind you’ll probably
want for a PC. If you plan to share a device between multiple PCs, you
could use an external drive and move it between the PCs. Otherwise,
you could install a home network and allow all your PCs to access the
device while it remained attached to a single PC.
A floppy drive (see Figure 22)
isn’t called an IDE device, but it’s a standard component
that’s readily available for about $15. Nobody uses them anymore.
Figure 22: Floppy drive Floppy drives are called 3.5” drives. Floppy drives and hard drives usually attach to the PC case with four screws.(two on each side).

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How to Build Your Own PC (http://www.PCGuide.com/byop/) on PCGuide.com
Version 1.0 - Version Date: May 4, 2005
Adapted with permission from a work created by Charlie Palmer.
PCGuide.com Version © Copyright 2005 Charles M. Kozierok. All Rights Reserved.
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