Even if physically separate disks are eliminated, some means of partitioning and abstracting the data should remain.
In the days of analog technology, however, no process involving a separate disk could hold synchronization precisely or reliably.
Although the text and images were stored on separate disks, it was in keeping with standards current at the time.
Storage Technology uses sophisticated software to spread information out over many separate but interconnected disks.
You could partition the drive, but you're better off with separate physical disks.
However, more sophisticated work environments of the time required separate disks for documents and the system installation.
Record creations directly on the hard disk in real time: separate tracks, inputs and outputs.
The parity information is stored on a separate (dedicated) disk.
Under it Margo could see some kind of crown with three separate disks across the brow.
Other computer systems, such as the Commodore 64, require a separate save-game disk.