answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

Not presently. The biggest flash drives are usually never bigger than 2 GB, and movies are usually 2 or more GB dpending on format.

User Avatar

Wiki User

16y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: Can you use a flash drive to record and watch a movie Is that technology around the corner?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Related questions

Where can you get a bus from Barwon Heads Terrace Joondalup?

Around the corner on Hodges Drive.


What means to drive around the bend?

it means that you just turn the corner and there you are at your destination


What technology does a flash drive utilize?

usb drive


What is a Digital Linear Tape drive?

Digital Linear Tape drive (DLT) is also known as a Compac Tape, it is a tape data storage that uses linear serpentine to record multiple tracks. This technology was first developed in 1984.


What is a limitation of a CD-R drive that isn't an issue with aCD-RW drive?

An CD-R drive is a Record only drive, an CD-RW drive can re-record to an Disk


My license to drive record?

No


What is the best way to drive around a curve?

Close to the inside. As you head into the corner, break slightly (depending on your speed) and then at the middle of the curve, accelerate out of the curve.


Windows Vista technology that supports a hybrid drive is called?

The Windows Vista technology that supports a hybrid drive is called ReadyDrive.


Does technology drive business or business drive technology?

at some points (industrial revolutions) technology drives business. most of the time businesses will drive for new technology to be made.


Will it hurt the motor if you drive it with worn rings?

If you have worn rings, the motor is already hurt. If the bearings are as bad as the rings, catastrophic failure is right around the corner.


What is the name of the vista technology that supports a hybrid drive?

ReadyDrive


what hard drive technology is used to predict when a drive is likely to fail?

Smart