Do you mean like a floppy disk, a CD, or a ZIP disk?
You should be able to access them unless the files are protected in some way or if the files are corrupted.
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Files downloaded to a hard drive remain on the hard drive of that computer, even if they are subsequently loaded on a CD or floppy disc. If that disc or floppy is opened using a separate computer, the information on the disc is read without involving the hard drive of the computer. No information from the disc is placed on the hard drive of the second computer unless saved to it.
yes.
you need some sort of interface, called an operating system to arbitrate the exchange of information. ex in dos: copy a:/ c:/
The simple thing to remember a disk,a floppy,a hard disk,DVD,CD,etc are all just storage devices.
If something is "copyed" from hard disk to floppy disk then there will be the same data on both.If its "cut" from one and "pasted" to the other then the data will be on the one its pasted to and not on the one "cut" from.
In order to access this data an operating system will be needed to read it.If the data was encrypted then the encryption software used will also be needed to decrypt the data again on the computer you are trying to read it.
If a program's executable file or setup / install files are not saved to the harddrive, no, the program will not run without the disk in the disk drive.
Short answer to this. No, the data can't magically jump from one computer to another (providing the computer's aren't networked. If they were however, it would be unlikely the files would be stored on floppy) short answer: no, not normally. long answer: maybe. if the file has a backup copy written on the harddrive somewhere, and someone knows where to look, then, yes. take the screws off and throw a bucket of water on top of it and then get a blow dryer and dry i did that and now iam in hospitel and pepol are feeding me ice cream and chocolate EVERY MINIT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! The files cannot be accessed unless they are stored somewhere else on the system or they are in temporary files. in short; no. NO. In fact, your question has a false answer. Files saved onto a floppy disk cannot be accessed from the disk unless the user uses the disk in the computer. The only way to access the same files without a disk is to have a backup on another disk, hard drive, or other medium.
Files? Documents? Folders? Programs?
Ntbootdd.sys
This is to prevent people from renting games and installing them on their harddrive.
hard drive / hard disk
Disk compression on commonly-accessed files Files on the hard disk are too fragmented The computer has a virus
You can store any files on a 4gb IPOD as if it was a USB drive by ENABLING DISK USE through ITUNES. They do not have to be music files to be stored. When you have ENABLED DISK USE you can access the IPOD from MY COMPUTER as if it was a harddrive or external drive and then drag your files over on to the IPOD.
a harddrive...
Currently SC2 takes up 8gb of my disk space and the saved files for me is around 300mb
The PS2 does not have a harddrive
Ultimately on to some physical media device such as magnetic tape, disk, optical disk or solid state disk. However if the files are paper files they would be stored in a filing cabinet or box in an archive.