Floppy Disk Drive
Full Form of FDD
What is FDD?
A Floppy Disk Drive (FDD) is a hardware device used to read from and write to floppy disks, which are removable magnetic storage media. In India, FDDs were widely used throughout the 1990s and early 2000s in personal computers, especially in educational institutions and government offices for data transfer and software installation. Today, they are largely obsolete due to the advent of USB flash drives, cloud storage, and optical discs, but they still appear in computer fundamentals curricula for competitive exams like SSC, IBPS RRB, and state-level IT exams. Understanding the FDD helps students grasp the evolution of storage technologies from magnetic tapes to solid-state drives. The typical FDD uses a 3.5-inch disk holding 1.44 MB of data, though earlier 5.25-inch drives existed. In Indian classrooms, teachers often demonstrate the mechanism of a floppy drive head reading concentric magnetic tracks. Despite its decline, the FDD remains a classic example of sequential and random access storage principles, and questions about its capacity, components, and history are common in computer awareness sections of banking and railway exams. The term is also relevant when discussing legacy systems still used in some Indian rural banking and printing setups.
FDD का फुल फॉर्म
फ्लॉपी डिस्क ड्राइव
Example
In the old computer lab, the instructor showed students how to insert a 3.5-inch floppy into the FDD to save a document.