Hold down the windows key on your key board (the one next to ctrl and alt) and press the Pause/Break key once .This will show you how much ram you have.
Press the windows key+ and tap E once then right click on any drive and it will tell you how much space is there in each of those hard disks
There are ways of doing this, but there are complications which mean it can't always work, but first let's look at how to do it. Say you have the name as follows: Peter Colgan What you do here is to find where the space is. Once you've located the space, then you take the text up to it and extract it and cut the rest of the cell out and extract it. To find the space, you use the Find function. So say the text is in A1, then the formula to find the space is: =Find(" ",A1) That will give you a number, representing the location of the space, in this case 6. Now what you can do is get the first 6 characters from the left of the cell, which can be done like this: =left(A1,6) That will get you Peter and the space. To do it in one go, you would put the Find formula into the Left formula, noting that there are 2 brackets at the end. =Left(A1,Find(" ",A1)) To get from the space onwards, for the surname, you would use the MID function, which takes text from a cell starting at a set point, for a set amount of characters. Using the Find function again, it would be as follows: =MID(A1,Find(" ",A1),10) The 10 there will get the next 10 characters from the space onwards. To be accurate you need to know how long the text will be. You can use the LEN formula, which gets the length of the text in a cell minus where you found the space. So you could have this: =MID(A1,FIND(" ",A1),LEN(A1)-FIND(" ",A1)) This will work for you, but there is one problem. If someone has a double-barrelled name, there is no way to tell the computer which is the surname. So if you applied the above to "James Patrick Doyle" then it will take the surname as starting from the first space and not the second one, giving "Patrick Doyle" as the surname and not "Doyle". So there is no 100% way of doing it.
if gap is not left between railroads, it will expand in summer and will bend if no space is left
Yes you can look on the history on the top left.
Because most people are right handed, and use the sword in their right hand because it is their stronger arm. It's also something to do with them believing left hander's were sorta inferior, and the left side being called the sinister side. a left hander in a shield wall ruined the entire setup, because a roman shield wall meant covering yourself and your mate in equal measure. By A 13 year old kid.
Aten/Aton was the disk of the sun in ancient Egyptian religion. A golden disk with hands like rays or beams of light like arms reaching out with hands at the end of them.
In the computer, at the left side...
Left=click on your 'My Computer' icon on the desk-top, and it'll show the devices attached (usually just shows the internal disk-drives)
Hard drive space, is frequently located in "my computer" and can easily tell you have much space you have used, and the amount of space that you have left. Simply click on "my computer", and choose the drive that you wish to look at. If you already have done this and would like to know how to clean up some of the space to widen your capacity, you may want to do a system restore, and a disk defragment, to compress some of the widely spread data eating up your space. The bottom line is, you'll want to check the "my computer" file visible by simply clicking the icon on your computer.
After the disk has been read goto the windows sign at the bottom left of the screen and click it, goto 'my computer' or 'computer' and click it, finally click where it says DVD and the disk will start playing.
It means you have 83 GB of space left.
On the desktop or in the start menu, right click My Computer and then Properties. The RAM is listed there. It may take a second to show up. I'm not sure what you mean by ROM, but if you mean hard disk space (I'm assuming), left click on My Computer and right click the C: drive and click properties and it should show the total amount under Total Size.
Double click on the "My Computer" button (It says "Computer" if using Windows Vista or Windows 7) . Look for the "Local Disk". If more than one Local disk appears, the Hard Drive is partitioned. It should be the sum of all the partitions. For Macintosh users, just go to the "System Profile" option, by clicking the apple on the upper left.
You go to the Lighthouse and it's under the piano to your left!
Unused disk space is space on a hard drive (or another kind of disk such as a CD) which has not had any digital information written onto it or is free to be written over. Example: you buy a brand new 100GB hard drive and the only thing on it is your copy of Windows7 64-bit. About 20 GB of the hard drive are required to store the Windows7 operating system on, so you would have around 80GB left that is "free." This is unused disk space. An interesting fact, too: when you delete something by putting it into your "recycle bin" and deleting it, it doesn't actually "go" anywhere. The computer does not go in and actually "erase" that information from your hard drive, it just notes that the area where that information was stored is now "free" to be written over with new information, so this also counts toward "unused disk space."
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Go into my computer and see how much free space you have left on your drives. If the amount of data you are copying is greater in size than the free space you have, you will get that same error every time. If you are low on disk space, you will need to clean up your drive and or delete some old files to leave some space.
Well, that depends on how many GBs your iPod can hold and how many GBs of stuff you have on it. To find out how much free space you have left connect you ipod to your computer and open itunes. When it is done syncing click on your ipod in the left column you should see an illustration at the bottom of this page that shows you how much free space you have left.