Yes you can, but the computer will only read the drive you are using at that particular time, you can only use one drive at a time.
normally RAM and H drives are on most computers. other just use there flash drives or floppy disks
Yes, it can slow you computer or other device down. Web pages will take longer to load with Adobe Flash. If you have a computer you definitely want Adobe Flash. A computer CPU can handle Adobe Flash smoothly. But for phones and tablets I recommend you don't have Adobe Flash.
A magnet does not affect a computer other than the [mechanical] hard drives. Even then, you'd have to take it out and run it through a relatively powerful magnet for it to do anything. Flash drives, "jump drives", or "thumb drives" are a form of solid-state storage (just as SSDs are, but on a different level) and are not susceptible to electromagetic fields.
Pen drives are commonly known as Flash drives, Thumb drives and USB flash drive, memory stick and finger stick. These small devices come with full sized applications.
a flash drive is a usb memory stick that saves any work you put on to it and it goes into the usb port on the computer
to hold data
Flash-drives, or "thumb-drives"can hold digitized information, along with External hard drives and other things.
It could be anything depending upon how many other drives you have. It would probably be the next letter after whatever letters have already been used.
USb Drives based on flash memory and other flash memory are not volatile. Volatile means erases or looses memory when shut off or disconnected.
There are many places where one can find free promotional USB flash drives. This includes promotional events such as conferences, trade shows and other marketing venues.
A pen drive is another name for a USB flash drive. Other names are Flash drive, USB flash drive, Thumb drive, etc. They are devices that allow storage of computer files that you can remove and take from computer to computer. The price of the drive is determined by the size of its memory measured in megabytes or gigabytes. While 128 megabyte drives used to be considered large, current pen drives sizes can reach 1, 2, 4, or more gigabytes. The drives are inserted in the computers USB ports and are automatically recognized on PC operating systems beyond Windows 98 (which needs a separate installation of drivers). Pen drives can also have full blown applications on them which are written in what is called U3 compatible software.
internet, sd cards, cd's, dvd's flash drives, external hard drives, etc.