If its via usb then no. USB is to slow its only like 3 mbs a sec.
yes, because of same master and slave combination.
The fastest type of external hard drive would be a external 3.0 USB hard drive.
You get another memory storage device, such as an external hard drive, and you copy everything on your hard drive onto the external hard drive, and keep it safe. That way, if your hard drive crashes, then you can take it out, and plug your external hard drive in, and work from that.
---- # go to "my computer" # browse to your external hard drive # then open another "my computer" window # drag and drop the file(s) you want to the window displaying the external hard drive. ----
you can go to the service center of your external hard drive.
The external hard drive is a great way of backing up your data.
You can't actively record to a CD in the same way as you can to a video cassette, but nothing stops you recording to a PC hard drive and then burning the video file to a CD afterwards.
Some of the benefits of the Lacie External Hard Drive are that one can take the External Hard Drive to wherever one need it, also that these External Hard Drives are practical and easy to take since they are small.
Actually, the external hard drive is not located in the computer. It is an external hard drive, which means it is on the outside of the computer. It is plugged into the computer's USB port with a cord.
The volume label of an external hard drive refers to the string, which shows before the drive letter if you were to look at the drive using My Computer. For instance, if it is written External Drive:E, then the label is External Drive.
I do mean an external hard drive.
The external hard drive is supported on our 211, 211k, 411, 612, 622, 722, 722k, and 922 receivers. It will support single tier hard drives from 50 GB to 2 TB DVR receivers and 50 GB to 1TB non-DVR receivers (211, 211k, 411). You can use external hard drives in like receiver families so if a receiver is replaced it will still work if you have the same receiver model (722 for a 722). The rest of the information below is correct except for the hard drive sizes. Some Dish Network DVR support moving of TV programs to an external USB 2.0 hard drive. The ViP 622 has this feature and they support up to 750GB hard drives. However, this doesn't let you read the drive on a PC and copy these files somewhere else such as DVD. This is also supported on the ViP722 as well. However, you can't record directly to the external drive but you can move video to it and play directly from the drive. You can use multiple external drives on the same Personal Video Recorder or PVR.