Go to the Control Panel and search for Folder options. Then open View tab. Clear the check boxes for hidden folders. Leave the check box on hidden system files unless you absolutely need it.
If you have a D drive on your computer, then you can save files onto it. You might do so to have your data files on a particular drive, rather than having them all on the C drive. Your C drive is usually used for storing the actual programs. So it can be useful to keep your data on a separate disk. It is a good organisational strategy. It can make it easier to see how much data you have, as you know that anything that is on the D drive are data files. If there is a crash on the C drive, you could still have all your files safe on the D drive. So there are lots of good reasons for doing it.
Because Drive D has more space than Drive c because of their differents EXAMPLE : Drive D is data. Data is important so it has more room than drive C , Drive c of course is just C ,so that makes Drive C less important! C is just its name nothing fancy.
To access hidden files from command prompt, go to start, and in the search box, type "cmd", then enter. From there, click start, computer, my computer and look for F drive. Type F, then enter. Then type attrib -s -h -r /s /d, and hit enter. Go to your F drive and you should be able to see the hidden files.
its flows from Data to RAM through d cables and its been caried by the Busses
a virus that destroys the hard drive also know as the (d:) is syphillis
The hard drive D: is usually the recovery drive for most Windows operating systems. It's best to stay away from that drive if it is.
It is just another area on the hard drive for you to store data. There is no difference between the C and D hard drive. Although many computer manufacturers split a hard drive in 3 parts. 1 is a hidden partition that basically stores the factory system restore program, the second is the C drive, and the thrid is the D drive which can be used as a backup for the system. You may use disk management (vista only) or a thrid-party partition editor (recommed for xp or lower) to resize your partitions if you want to get rid of the D drive to increase space on the C drive.
To access a shadow copy on your D drive, you will need to check and see if the permissions allow you to view the copy. You can go to "Start", click on "D Drive" and then attempt to open the copy from there.
Start Windows Explorer, right-click drive D and then select Format. Of course, be sure to back up any data you want to save beforehand.
c:\ attrib -h or +h (name of file) First of all change hidden file into nonhidden file then easly delete let file name is "MOON" in d:\ drive then first step [ d:\attrib -h d:\ moon ] Enter [ d:\del moon ] Enter ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Yes, Surely it will remove everything on hard drive. Formatting a hard drive means to remove everything on hard drive. If you are formatting only a specific drive like C:\ or D:\ then the data in only that drive will be removed.
A Capability For Restoring Data On A Non-Reformatable Partition. (Drive(i.e. C:\ , D:\ Etc.)) -Razgriz