What's your clickfree device model number
For a Windows PC, click the START button (usually in the bottom left corner of the display. Select MY COMPUTER. Then you can right-click on the drive icon (say the "C:" drive) and select PROPERTIES. This opens a window that provides information about the drive and includes information such as the drive capacity and used and free space on the drive.
The easiest way, on windows, is to open up "my computer" and right-click on your hard drive (usually drive C or D) and select properties. Total, used, and free space is displayed with a pie chart.
During installation, Windows 7 will need about 16GB on a hard drive.
it says free drive at the bottom or just click a car in the my Sim mode (the man and woman) - click car sign- click car sign on top of bout sign - and click and car.
If the drive is completely full of data, then no. If, however, you're referring to the most common setup, where there is a single partition covering the entire drive, then you simply need enough free space on the partition, and the Linux installer will then repartition the drive out of the free space, and create a dual boot setup. You can right click on the main drive in Windows Explorer (typically C:), select properties, and see how much free space you have. If you have a few Gb's free, that's enough to get you a basic Linux setup.
Windows Exporer
It requires 20 GB of free hard drive space.
How many gigabytes you can download on to your computer matter only how much free space is on your hard drive. For windows xp and below go follow these steps. My Computer - Right Click on your Hard drive- Properties- Then you see how much free space you have. For Vista if you go under my computer and you can look at your hard drive and it will show you.
A 20GB hard drive with at least 15GB free space.
Go to Control Panel and double click on the "C Drive' Icon. (Assuming C is the letter for your hard disk). Then on a free area inside the window, right click and select 'properties' then 'tools'. It should be there.
I dont know which OS you are referring In Linux in the shell you can run the following command df In Windows, you can click My Computer and press right click the drive what you want and select properties which shows the size, free size, occupied size etc
depends on the Hard Drive.... if you've got a version of windows goto: My computer right click on the HD in question choose properties on the drop down list you'll see a pie chart of your hard drive listing used/free and total space