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Kolanaki ,
@Kolanaki@yiffit.net avatar

It’s the same thing. The difference is origin. Disk is American. Disc is British. Usually the only time “disc” is used in the US, is to refer to something round. A CD could go either way, depending on the writer.

intensely_human ,

A disk is something that contains information. It stands for Dense Inside Stored Knowledge

feedum_sneedson ,

Dense Information Storage Circle

SzethFriendOfNimi , (edited )
@SzethFriendOfNimi@lemmy.world avatar

There’s been some movement over time but in general disk was used for pc because you had Hard Disk Drives. Then their counterpart the floppy diskette (disks).

Disc as a term was used for media like compact discs and subsequently digital video discs, etc. and then pc components allowing them to be read and then written to did exist for PC’s and, as such, had the disc moniker. But that’s because they were already “discs” branding wise.

USB thumb drives, being created as portable removable media for pc’s were a kind of solid state disk and so they use the k. Even NVME, being primarily storage for computing devices, can also colloquially be called “disks” but more and more people just refer to them as drives and I suspect those who refer to them as disks may do so out of older computer hardware habits and that utilities (fdisk, df, etc)call any such media a “disk”.

GardenVarietyAnxiety ,

Disc seems to be anything with a round and flat outer appearance, where disk seems to refer to any other storage media

I think they’re the same word, though.

altima_neo ,
@altima_neo@lemmy.zip avatar

They’re all the same word at their core, evolving from the older Latin word. The difference just comes in how the words were used to describe either a computer related device, hard disk, floppy disk, or a sound carrying device, disc record, compact disc.

snugglesthefalse ,

I always thought discs were optical and disks were magnetic

thawed_caveman ,

You know “disc” is actually a weird word.

Like say it a few times out loud

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