Open up computer right click on computer click on explorer click on files you want to use
(For example pictures) then drag the file to removable disk or what every yours say.
email me at jackie2830@hotmail.com if it works ok.
Windows 2000 has built-in support for USB flash drives, so no special procedure is ncessary. Just plug it into an available USB port. As long as the drive has been properly formatted, it will appear automatically in My Computer. If it is not formatted, you will need to use Disk Management ot format it. Open the Run prompt and enter diskmgmt.msc. This will launch the Disk Management tool, from where you can perform the initial format for the flash drive.
put your flash drive in the computer and boot the windows CD when the setup come and asks about partitioning use the directory of your flash drive
Not all computers support booting from a USB Flash drive, and you cannot install Windows from a USB flash drive without extensive effort.
Any type of Flash drive can be used in Windows Vista.
When you buy a flash drive it is already formatted in a way that Windows can understand. The good news is that Macs can understand it too. So you can use a Mac to save files onto the flash drive and then read them on a Windows PC, or the other way round, no problem. If you used Disk Utility on the Mac to format the flash drive, then there is a chance that Windows won't be able to read it. So don't do that unless you know what you are doing.
format using windows formatter
The Dane-Elec Flash Drive is compatible with Windows and Mac.
It depends on which operating system you want to boot on your flash drive. I have been using Bootsage to create a Windows 7 installer flash drive or a WinPE bootable environment, and it seems to work very well. It runs under Windows XP as well as Windows 7. http://firesage.com/bootsage
Yes by using a usb flash drive.
No because xbox do not have windows
It is possible to install Windows 8 using a USB flash drive with at least 4 GB of space. The process requires creating a Windows 8 ISO, or buying Windows 8 as an ISO, and adjusting the computer's BIOS to boot up from the USB drive rather than the hard drive.
I saved all my pictures from the trip on a flash drive.
If Windows, there is a small icon in the bottom task bar which, when clicked on, will unmount the flash drive and tell you when it is safe to remove the flash drive. In Linux, the drive is unmounted before removing. The idea is to ensure that any writing to the flash drive has been completed and the drive can be removed without corruption.