yes itcan just make sure you got the latest libusb and usbmount install. They are other files that will work also. Now the way I use mine is as a mass storage so is just a drag and drop if you are thinking of using amarok no clue have not try that.
Yes. Ubuntu can read files and directories created by a Windows system.
WAV is a file format. There is no difference between a WAV file on Ubuntu and a WAV file on Windows.
ON ubuntu* -first download the restricted extras (it has all the codecs u need) go to you terminal and type in: sudo apt-get install ubuntu-restricted-extras -then if u want a music player to play your files download something like Banshee. go to your ubuntu software center and search banshee and click install
Go to the ubuntu software store and download wine. With that you can install exe files on your system.
No special hardware (other than a sound card) is necessary to play MP3 files on Ubuntu. You may need to install additional codecs. Installing the ubuntu-restricted-extras should install most codecs necessary for playback of MP3s. For other types of files, you may need to use the Medibuntu repository.
The default file manager in Ubuntu (Unity and GNOME) is Nautilus. In Kubuntu and KDE, it is Dolphin. You can install other file managers, such as Konqueror, and Thunar.
Ubuntu generally creates a different partition on your hard drive, formatted with the EXT4 filesystem. Therefore, without special software, you cannot access your files on Ubuntu from Windows. However, you can access your Windows files from Ubuntu without any trouble. When Ubuntu is installed, you get to choose whether to boot into Ubuntu or Windows when the computer turns on. That means that you cannot be actively logged into both Windows and Ubuntu on the same computer. However, you can install Ubuntu on a virtual machine, making the computer run Ubuntu inside an emulator in Windows. This makes it possible to run Ubuntu while you are logged into Windows. I do not recommend it, though. Ubuntu users and Windows users are in different operating systems, so you cannot just switch between them like you can in Windows accounts.
install wine and then you will be able to run .exe files on ubuntu
Ubuntu doesn't have a built-in virus scanner, so no warning message is going to pop up if you insert an infected drive.
VCE files are created using the Visual CertExam Suite. In order to properly open this files, you will need to download and install a program that is designed specifically for these types of files.
What you are seeing in wine is not the windows files from your windows 7 installation, but windows files that the wine "emulation" package. Your windows 7 files are somewhere else. I'm a Fedora user, so not sure about Ubuntu, but try browsing to /media and see if you can see your windows 7 drive there.
You can't. You must have some form of installation medium to install an operating system. Although it is possible to install over a network, it is very difficult to set this up correctly, and you will still need the installation files on another computer. Depending on the operating system in question, it may be possible to remove the hard drive, connect it to another computer, and either image a file system onto it, or run the installer (providing, again, that you have a disk or files). well if you don't have the RIGHT disk you could try Ubuntu...it is free and all you need is a blank CD to make a Ubuntu live CD if you don't have ANY disk I'm afraid you are S.O.L my friend... keep in mind that Ubuntu is a Linux OS not windows so you will not be able to run .exe files on it...you'll have to run tar.gz(i think) files on Ubuntu, and Ubuntu is not good for games, although with the use of windows emulators (such as W.I.N.E.) you can get some .exe files and some games to work