To get your flash drive unstuck, you will probably have to use as much of your strength and pull it out of your computer. Luckily, you will not lose any of your files as long as the flash drive itself is not damaged.
I guess if you copy the files or option drag the sites Certainly. Copy the files and paste them to the flash drive. They stay on your hard drive.
The flash drive replaced floppy disks and cd-roms as storage devices. Flash drives are still in popular usage for file storage. Some even use flash drives as back up storage for their whole computer files in the event of a crash.
Why not plug it into the computer. If you can get the files off the drive then it is still working. If you can not get the files of the drive then chances are it is not working.
Yes. Puppy Linux only needs about four files to be on the drive. You can put any other files on the drive, space permitting. If you keep a FAT file system, you can even still use the disk under Windows.
You would put files onto a flash-drive just like you would any other drive. When you plug in a flash-drive it shows up as a removable hard disk & is assigned a drive letter. Open up "my computer" or "computer" depending on what program your computer is using and look for a drive E:; F:; G:; or the bran name of your flash-drive. Example: Lexar . Once you have opened up the file, you simply drag the file(s) you want from your computer onto the flash-drive, you can also copy the file you want from your computer and paste it onto your flash-drive.
The pics will remain on the computer if they were copied, rather than moved, onto a Flash drive. To move files, as opposed to copying, on a Mac hold down the Command key (cmd) and click and drag a file's icon. Or just delete unwanted files after they have been copied.
If your files were on that C: drive, then they are pretty much gone. There are programs that will attempt recovery of formatted drives but if anything at all has been written to the drive you can forget about it. If the files were on a different physical drive and you really only formatted C: then the files should still be present and available for access.
No, OS X Yosemite will not delete your data. I installed it and it did not delete my data. Just in case, you might want to copy the most important files onto a flash drive or put them into the Cloud. This way, if something glitches, then your most important files will still save.
sorry to break your hopes but you cant it might be cool to have a software that may be able to do that but you still cant and if you cant find your flash then me and you are the same
yes, external memory counts as portable/External Hard drives, USB flash sticks/drives, SD cards, CD's/DVD's and floppy disks (ancient but still count :P). Anything that you can put files,pictures, movies, etc on counts as external memory.
Downloaded files always make a temp file in your computer, no matter you delete it or not there is always a way to recover it. So you can not download and copy files from a system without leaving a trace.
If you store your backup of your C:\ drive (which is usually where all your files, photos, etc are stored) on another (logical) partition on the same physical drive (C:\) and this is where you store your backup, if the drive should fail you would lose both the original files AND the backup as well. This is because they both reside on the SAME physical drive. Buy an inexpensive thumb drive or external hard drive and store your backups there. This way is the C:\ drive fails, you still have your backup files (on the external or flash (thumb) drive).