Refers to the time a program or device takes to locate a particular piece of data. The time it takes for a disk drive to move its head(s) from one track to another. The seek time depends on the power of the servo motor that moves the head, the mass of the heads, the number of tracks traversed and the time taken to position the heads over the target track accurately enough to start data transfer (which includes several variables). The terms seek time and access time are often used interchangeably. Technically speaking, however, the access time is often longer than the seek time because it includes a brief latency period.
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"Seek time" refers to the amount of time it takes for a storage device, such as a hard drive, to locate and access specific data on the disk. It is measured in milliseconds and is an important factor in determining the overall performance of the storage device. Lower seek times indicate faster access to data.
In excel 2010 it can be found in the data tab > data tools > what if analysis > goal seek
Refers to the time a program or device takes to locate a particular piece of data. The time it takes for a disk drive to move its head(s) from one track to another. The seek time depends on the power of the servo motor that moves the head, the mass of the heads, the number of tracks traversed and the time taken to position the heads over the target track accurately enough to start data transfer (which includes several variables). The terms seek time and access time are often used interchangeably. Technically speaking, however, the access time is often longer than the seek time because it includes a brief latency period.
As simple as possible it is the time it takes a disk to find a piece of requested data.Seek time is composed of two parts:The time to mechanically move the heads from the track they are on to the track the requested data is on, this is usually the longest part of seek time.The time for the disk to rotate and bring the data to the head, once the head is on the right track.Most modern hard disks contain a cache memory, if the requested is still in the cache memory the effective seek time drops to zero as the drive doesn't have to access the disk.
Data Tab Data Tools Group
Data Tab Data Tools Group
what is seek time
Yes. Under the data tab > what if analysis > goal seek
Access time on a magnetic disk is the total time taken to read or write data, which consists of seek time, rotational latency, and transfer time. For example, if a disk has a seek time of 10 milliseconds (ms), a rotational latency of 5 ms (half the time of a 60 RPM disk), and a transfer time of 2 ms to read the data, the total access time would be 10 ms + 5 ms + 2 ms = 17 ms. This calculation helps in assessing the performance of the disk for data retrieval tasks.
it's either: seek time, computer virus, data transfer rate, rotational delay, setting time, magnetism, rotational time, seek delay
There are a few places where one can seek advice on network and data security. This includes contacting data security experts as well as asking on forums dedicated to the topic.