If you want to protect files on computer from being copied, you can use Kakasoft Shared Folder Protector. This program allows you to configure other users' permissions to the protected folder, only admin of the folder has full control. For example, you can use it to set a User 1 group and then prohibit copy, modify, and delete permissions to this group, and set this group as default logon account; after this configuration, all users who don't know admin password of this folder can access the folder but can't copy, modify or delete content in it.
If you want to protect files in USB flash drive, you can try another program called USB Copy Protection.
The easiest way is to not copy the files and folders in the first place, just copy the CD itself. If you want to make a bootable CD from scratch, most CD-burning software includes that option. If you don't have that option, there are plenty of freeware tools on the internet that you can download for this purpose. Typically you will create an ISO image of the CD from a folder structure and then burn the image.
different files
Uninstalling DirectX 10 from Vista is impossible to my knowledge. Uninstalling the non-official DirectX 10 from XP is not. To so do, you'll need a computer that has whatever version you want to switch to, an uninstaller for 9.0 called UnDx9.bat, and an XP installation disc. Copy all the DirectX files listed by dxdiag from a computer with an earlier installed. 9.0c is confirmed to work. Override all DirectX files while in safe mode. Run a 9.0 uninstaller that replaces all your DirectX files from the Windows CD. It should replace your files with 8.1. Then replace the 8.1 files with the files copied from the other computer. Find the version number of DirectX for those files and find the registry values that the uninstaller adds to the registry. They should be in dxvfix.ini. Change the value for the version to whatever the version you're adding is. 4.09.0000.0904 is the number for 9.0c. Then run the latest updater for DirectX 9.0c and it should update some files. This should leave you with 9.0c.
Its trancription.
constructor is called every times when we create object of class using new keywordand constructor can not be copied (vinayak shendre)
The file that is being copied is considered the "source" and the resltut of the copy and its location are considered the "destination"
The file that is being copied is considered the "source" and the resltut of the copy and its location are considered the "destination"
It is for all intents and purposes impossible to stop a file from being copied. Once you have given another person access to a file, they can copy it as much as they like. You can only protect the contents of a Word document from being read. If it can be read, it can be copied.
It depends what you are copying them to. If you are copying them to another hard drive, it will have a different drive letter. it is the same with USB drives.
Source
Source
no
All types of files that can be read and copied.
source drive
The source folder. The folder they are being copied to is the destination folder.
No. You need to have the flash drive unless you copied the files to the PC.
No. They are not copied to the computer's harddrive. Just the destination drive gets the files.