Asked by ava

How are hard drives and solid-state drives different?


Solid-state drives are read-only and hard drives are not.


Hard drives are read-only and solid-state drives are not.


Solid-state drives are mechanical and hard drives are not.


Hard drives are mechanical and solid-state drives are not.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
Hard drives are mechanical and solid-state drives are not.

Explanation: HDDs use spinning magnetic platters and moving read/write heads (mechanical parts). SSDs use flash memory (no moving parts), making them faster, more shock-resistant, and quieter.