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  2. SuperDisk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SuperDisk

    Circuit components of the external USB SuperDisk for Macintosh. The drive itself is the same size as a standard 3.5″ floppy drive, but uses an ATA interface. On the right is the USB-to-ATA adapter, which plugs into an intermediate fan-out and power supply daughterboard that is inside the rear of the Mac drive's casing.

  3. USB flash drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USB_flash_drive

    In particular, Mac OS X 10.7 is distributed only online, through the Mac App Store, or on flash drives; for a MacBook Air with Boot Camp and no external optical drive, a flash drive can be used to run installation of Windows or Linux from USB, a process that can be automated via the use of tools like the Universal USB Installer or Rufus.

  4. List of portable software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_portable_software

    Example of a 4GB USB flash drive. For the purposes of this list, a portable application is software that can be used from portable storage devices such as USB flash drives, digital audio players, PDAs [1] or external hard drives. To be considered for inclusion, an application must be executable on multiple computers from removable storage ...

  5. Live USB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_USB

    A live USB is a portable USB-attached external data storage device containing a full operating system that can be booted from. The term is reminiscent of USB flash drives but may encompass an external hard disk drive or solid-state drive, though they may be referred to as "live HDD

  6. List of Apple drives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Apple_drives

    400K Drive (internal) Macintosh External Disk Drive (400K) UniDisk; DuoDisk; UniDisk 3.5 ; Macintosh 800K External Drive; Disk 5.25; Apple 3.5 Drive; Apple SuperDrive; Macintosh HDI-20 External 1.4MB Drive

  7. Macintosh External Disk Drive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macintosh_External_Disk_Drive

    The Macintosh can only support one external drive, limiting the number of floppy disks mounted at once to two, but both Apple and third party manufacturers developed external hard drives that connected to the Mac's floppy disk port, which had pass-through ports to accommodate daisy-chaining the external disk drive.