Double-sided disk
In computer science, a double-sided disc is a disc of which both sides are used to store data.
Early floppy disks only used one surface for recording. The term "single sided disc" was not common until the introduction of double-sided disc, which offered double the capacity in the same physical size. Initially, the double-sided floppy disks had to be removed and flipped over to access data on the other side, but eventually devices were made that could read both sides without the need to eject the disk.
DVDs also are available in single-sided and double-sided formats. When used for movie releases, double-sided DVDs typically have the widescreen (or letterbox) version of the movie on one side, and the pan and scan (sometimes called "fullscreen") version on the opposite side. Some releases place the feature on one side, and the "extras" on the opposite. It is more common, however, for movies to be released on single-sided, dual-layer discs, with the film and extras on the same side, and widescreen and letterbox versions packaged separately. Some films like Schindler's List and Oliver! start on Side A and continue on Side B, and include a prompt for when to do so.