There sometimes are "Wake on LAN" parameters that can be set in BIOS which will boot a connected computer if the LAN card receives a command.
Removing the hard drive will not cause any damage. However, unless you add another hard drive, or have some other device you can boot off of, the computer will be effectively useless.
Assuming there is only one hard drive on the computer, then yes.
Drive Imaging!
I removed my hard drive and installed it in another computer as a secondary drive I then ran AVG (free version) this pickedout the files and found I had many Trojan files on my hard drive, one of which was Agent Z. You may be able to run AVG without removing the hard drive but I never tried this because the machine was badly infected.
The car has only one transaxle, AKA transmission, then no, you cannot remove the tranny without removing the tranny. If you mean without removing CV Axle or drive axle or Axle shaft or CV shaft (same thing) then the answer is still no. You cannot remove the transaxle without removing the drive axle/CV shaft.
if there is another port you can plug the pen drive into, try that. That will elimitate the port as the problem. If you have another computer available, try the pen drive in another computer. If it works, it's not the drive.
An external drive is one that is not in -side the computer- It is a Disk (hard) drive or can also be a CD drive which is connected by a cable to the computer. The connection is usually by SCSI, USB, or SATA(eSATA) connection. An external drive allows you to add a drive to the computer you are using - to expand storage or add a CD drive without actually having to open the computer to add another one. An external drive also allows you to move the drive from computer to computer, Portably. The external drive usually has it's own power supply and case.
None, unless you leave a disc in the cdrom drive.
To transfer information from a flash drive to another flash drive the information must be uploaded to a computer from flash drive A then uploaded from the computer to flash drive B.
no, the data stored on the hard drive will remain there. as soon as you connect the hard drive back up to the computer you will once again have full access to it like it was neither touched.
Test it on another computer and test another flash/pen-drive on that computer. Then use Google to find some flash-drive recovery programs. Finally, most likely, time to buy a new drive.
Just put the hard drive in another computer as a secondary drive, and all the information should be visible. There are many ways to do this these days. Here's a few. 1) Get a new motherboard and make your computer work again 2) Put the drive in another computer as a secondary drive 3) Use a USB Drive Enclosure to connect the drive to another computer.