here are some options=
1. Drag and drop from clicking it once and holding it and drop into your flash drive's window.
2.Open your document in what ever program you have and click save as and rename the document and changing the saving location on the bottom to the flash drive location of the save as window.
Not unless you specifically copy them to your hard drive. The flash drive acts like an external drive.
Any Flash drive can be used for that purpose. Just plug the Flash drive into your computer, open "My Computer", open the Flash drive, and drag and drop your documents.
Plug your flash drive into the USB port on the computer. If a folder does not pop-up immediately, go to your "My Computer" folder and find the USB drive there. Open the folder for the USB drive. Also open the folder the document folder containing the files that you want to put on the flash drive. Drag the documents over to the flash drive folder and a copy will be placed in the folder. Once all of the desired documents have been copied over, you can remove the flash drive from the computer.
Use google docs offline. It will put everything on the computer, as well as the cloud. You can then copy the documents to your flash drive!
Putting documents on your flashdrive (a USB storage device) is as simple as copying any file on your computer to an enumerated USB Flash Drive using drag-and-drop file listings. Alternatively any program that creates documents gives you the option to write the document to the Flash Drive using its "save as" command. Documents saved on a Flash Drive can opened, edited, then saved back to the storage device without the document being saved to the computer's hard drive.
Approximately how many hard-copy pages of documents could be stored on the flash drive by an employee.
This depends on the size of the documents in question. However, the following is an estimate.A 1 page document is approximately 30KB in size (this is for an Office 2003 document)There are 2097152KB in a 2GB flash drive2097152KB divided by 30KB = approximately 69,905 documentsSo you could probably fit about 69,905 1-page documents on a 2GB flash drive.We could also do the same for a 10-page document, which is approximately 145KB (again, Office 2003):2097152KB divided by 145KB = 14,463 documentsNeedless to say, it's a lot of documents!
LOADS! or maybe NONE!
To store small (or sometimes large, depending on the storage capacity,) amounts of data, such as programs or program files, documents, or videos (hence the name, "flash drive").
To store small (or sometimes large, depending on the storage capacity,) amounts of data, such as programs or program files, documents, or videos (hence the name, "flash drive").
There is only one use for a 4gb flash drive. They are used to save images, documents, video clips or sound clips and to transfer them to another computer.
No, a 4MB flash drive will only hold about two average sized pictures. Documents vary in size a by huge amounts so it is hard to tell but it would probably not hold more than 20 documents. A 4GB flash drive(there is an enormous difference between megabyte and gigabyte) will hold about 2000 average sized pictures though.