USB 2.0 drives will fall back to USB 1.1 speed if plugged into a USB 1.1 port. Windows 98 contains no driver for USB Flash drives by default, but a generic one can be installed. These will work with almost any drive, regardless of rated speed.
It depends on which operating system you want to boot on your flash drive. I have been using Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive or a WinPE bootable environment, and it seems to work very well. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage
Install the "Flash Player" from Adobe's website (linked below). If you mean a "Flash Drive" you would need to be more specific with the question.
It depends on which operating system you want to boot on your flash drive. I have been using an application called Firesage|Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive or a WinPE bootable environment, and it seems to work very well. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage
2000 expedition wipers & radio don't work when in drive
When you buy a flash drive it is already formatted in a way that Windows can understand. The good news is that Macs can understand it too. So you can use a Mac to save files onto the flash drive and then read them on a Windows PC, or the other way round, no problem. If you used Disk Utility on the Mac to format the flash drive, then there is a chance that Windows won't be able to read it. So don't do that unless you know what you are doing.
yeah but theres a certain format u need to make it
It depends on which operating system you want to boot on your flash drive. I have been using an application called Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive or a WinPE bootable environment, and it seems to work very well. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage
Yes. Any hard drive, flash drive, or other external storage device that conforms to the USB Mass Storage device standard will work on Windows Vista.
Flash memory works by storing information on a flash drive. This can be done by connecting the flash drive to your computer or laptop, and then transferring the information over to the drive.
it does not work because the flash drive is formatting, which will to complet eradication of every suff in the fash drive.
Almost all Flash drives should work with Windows 7. Flash drives are very genericized; most do not require any special drivers.
There are a few different options depending on which operating system you want to boot on your flash drive. I have been using an application called Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive or a WinPE bootable environment, and it seems to work very well. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage