A USB switch box should work for external USB drives.
The SmartDisk USB External 120GB HDD should work with your netbook.
External NTFS drives will work with no problem with Ubuntu. Just plug in and use it.
Any external hard drive that presents itself as a standard USB Mass Storage device should work in Windows ME. This is about 95% of the drives on the market. Note that large hard drives may perform very slowly with the FAT32 file system, and Windows ME does not support NTFS.
Any that are USB.
When they work together, they create what is known as a computer. Hardware is just external drives, like flashdrives and external hard drives. Software is what is in the computer, like the motherboard. Together, they make a computer.
They're a little inconvenient to carry around, but they work fine.
Where to buy an external hard drive that will work on Mac OS X 10.4? I recommend iomega, which manufactures external hard drives that will work on 10.4 or Where to find the actual drive when running the machine? Open Finder on the left panel there will be all of your drives listed. Click on one to access it.
While external hard drives have the availability to work with multiple computers, it would be false to say every external hard drive works with every computer.
Almost all Flash drives should work with Windows 7. Flash drives are very genericized; most do not require any special drivers.
External 1TB hard drives can be bought safely online, or from retail outlets. Amazon sell them for example, or you can go to somewhere that has a shop and internet presence. It is usually worth reading a few reviews before you buy, and you can pick them up and handle them in a shop, which may help with choice: External hard drives may work hard.
It depends what you are talking about. External hard drives should have no problem running on a Vaio laptop but if you are going to try to replace the main HD, good luck. Make sure the size fits.
Sometimes, yes. Being compatible with XP doesn't make the device incompatible with Windows 98. * USB keyboards and mice work fine. * Most older sound cards (say before 2004) should work fine. Some RealTek integrated chipsets may still work. * Ethernet cards should work. * Wireless-G cards should work. I am unaware of any "N" cards that support Windows 98. * Older video cards (before 2004) should work. Very few new ones do. * USB Flash drives and external hard drives work if you install a driver in Windows 98. Drives over 127 GB will give you problems. Windows 98 cannot read NTFS-formatted drives without extra software. * 56k modems should work. * Bluetooth is extremely iffy on Windows 98; don't invest any money in a dongle if you aren't sure it will work. * Most new USB printers do not work. * The Nintendo wireless adapter for the DS does not work. * SATA drives do not work unless the BIOS is switched to legacy mode. * Windows 98 cannot read HD-DVD / Blu-Ray discs. The drives will still work fine for reading DVDs and CDs.