The document summarizes secondary storage devices, including magnetic disks and optical disks. Magnetic disks store data on circular platters that rotate rapidly. Data is written to and read from the disks using read/write heads. Disks are organized into tracks, sectors, cylinders, and clusters. Accessing data involves seek time, rotational latency, and transfer time. Optical disks like CD-ROMs encode data as pits and lands that are read using a laser. CD-ROMs organize data into sectors along a spiral track to take advantage of all storage space.