Mb – (Megabit) When used to describe data storage, equal to one million bits.

Mbps – (Megabits per second) When used to described data transfer rates, it refers to one million bits per second.

NTFS – The primary file system for Windows 2000 and XP operating system that organizes files on your computer. Supports large capacity hard drives up to 2 TB.

Operating System – Software that allows the user and programs installed on your system to communicate with computer hardware such as a hard drive and processor.

Partition – A way to logically divide a hard drive so that an operating system treats each partition as if it were a separate hard drive. Each partition is assigned a unique drive letter in Windows or icon in the Mac OS.

Port – A connection or socket on the motherboard, controller card, case, or chassis for connecting peripheral devices, such as a USB socket or FireWire socket.

Restore Point – A snapshot of your files based on a specific date in time. It contains all the files and folders you select to backup, as they exist at the time that you back up.

Script – A saved backup procedure for Retrospect that you can schedule to run at some future date and time or on a repeating schedule, such as daily. You may create as many scripts as you wish.

Spin Down – Refers to the actual spinning of the disk mechanism. When a disk spins down, it stops spinning, thus conserving power.

TB – (Terabyte) Equal to 1,000,000,000,000 (trillion) bytes.

USB – Universal Serial Bus, a standard for connecting external devices to your computer.

Volume – A fixed amount of storage on a hard drive. The term volume is often used as a synonym for the drive itself, but it is possible for a single drive to contain more than one volume or for a volume to span more than one drive.

4

Glossary

53

Page 55
Image 55
Maxtor 800 manual