Erased files on a c drive are files which have had their locations removed from the file system index. Some operating systems keep a list of erased files in order to track them.
Click on My Computer. It is usually a screen icon. In Microsoft Windows click the Microsoft 'start' icon, which looks like a flag at the bottom left of your screen. This will open a menu. Click on the word 'Computer'. This will then display all your drives. Click on 'C' drive (The 'C drive' is normally the designation given by the system to your hard drive) and it will list all the folders, which you can click on to see sub-folders and files.
I suppose technically... if you locate the cookie on your hard drive and copy it as a file into the floppy drive.
Rosetta Stone error 2120 is a broken shortcut. To fix it delete the Rosetta Stone shortcut. Then go the Program files on your C drive and create a new shortcut from the .exe file and send it to the desktop.
An external hard drive is a device similar to your computer's hard drive. The difference is that it is portable. You can save files on it and it can be connected to most other computers.
If you are talking about internal storage, the SCSI drive was the first. However, tape drives were used long before that. Many early computers didn't even have a hard drive, instead the data was simply stored in RAM, and erased after the computer was turned off.
Any time that a file is deleted from a hard drive, it is not erased. What is erased is the bit of information that points to the location of the file on the hard drive. The file is flagged as "not there" and ignored by the system
Main Hard Drive
If the 'c' drive is blocked, you can't access program files
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.
It is possible with recovery software.Get this programs and install them on another hard drive with windows and then attach your formatted hard drive and try to recover your data.
It should already be there.(c program files)
The Program Files folder is located in the Local Drive C. To access it, go to Start and My Computer or just Computer, depending upon which version of Windows you are using.
You mean in your C: drive? How could anyone but yourself tell it?
cookies
If you have a D drive on your computer, then you can save files onto it. You might do so to have your data files on a particular drive, rather than having them all on the C drive. Your C drive is usually used for storing the actual programs. So it can be useful to keep your data on a separate disk. It is a good organisational strategy. It can make it easier to see how much data you have, as you know that anything that is on the D drive are data files. If there is a crash on the C drive, you could still have all your files safe on the D drive. So there are lots of good reasons for doing it.
delete files or uninstall programs. The c drive is used by the operating system and should not be allowed to get full
I would recommend you following utility for recovery .cdr files