just right click on file and save it in disk
You go to File > Save As or File > Bounce > To Disk
File > Save or File > SaveAs
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You cannot put an actual website email on a floppy disk. You can save the email as a word document and then you could save it on there like any other file.
Right click the file, select properties, click advanced, uncheck Compress contents to save disk space.
Delete some files from the disc or compact it
The logical size of a file is reduced to save disk space for easier and faster transmission over a network or the internet
Open the file, immediately save it to somewhere on your hard disk. Then make the changes and save them to hard disk. When you're done, copy the file to a CD-RW.
Click File then Save. The keyboard shortcut is Ctrl S. Also you can click the picture of a disk in the toolbar.
Files are compressed in order to save disk space on a hard drive.
Im not sure exactly what you mean, but if you have a save file on your hard drive then it doesnt matter what disk you use. Save files are on your hard drive not the disk itself.
When a computer saves a file to disk, it looks for the first piece of unused space (not necessarily a space big enough to save the file !). On finding empty space, it attempts to save the whole file. If the space is too small, it saves as much of the file that will fit, then searches for some more space until it's saved the entire file. This creates fragments of the file on the disk, which are linked by a 'tag' so the computer knows where each part of the file is. Having to search for fragments of a file can make a computer seem slow, as it has to wait for the hardware to find the pieces of the file before it can do anything with it. A disk de-fragmenting program collects all the 'pieces' of each file, copies them to memory, erases them from the disk, then re-writes the whole file to disk in one single piece. Regular de-fragmenting speeds up the computer, by reducing the time it takes to find each file.