The flash drive or stick has reached its capacity. Depends what you are storing and how big your flash drive is.
Hard drive, ROM (read-only memory) and RAM (random access memory)
Yes, it stores files from a computer. Examples would be: A flash drive, external hard drive, a USB connected digital camera, USB connected ipod or mp3 player. Anything that has memory in it to store data or files and is connected though a USB port.
The technical specifications of the Lenovo ThinkPad T61p 6460 Notebook are: 2.0 GB/4.0 GB memory, Intel Core 2 Duo processor, and a 160 GB hard drive.
Well, you could just buy a USB CD drive and then plug it in to your mini-notebook. However, there are other ways of doing what you want. If you have a computer that does have a CD drive and a USB port, what you want to do is very easy. Put the CD into the computer's CD drive. Copy and paste the files into Your Documents (or wherever else you store things on your computer. Just make sure you know where you saved the file). After you have copied and pasted all of the data onto your computer's hard drive, insert the USB drive/memory stick and copy and paste all of the data that you got from the CD onto the USB drive. With the files on the USB drive, you should then be able to plug the USB drive out of your computer and into your mini notebook.
No, the memory chips are RAM, Random Access Memory. These are actual chips that fit into slots on the motherboard. This type of memory is temporary memory that your computer uses for current operations. This can be compared to active consciousness. This is what you're aware of at that moment, what's currently happening. The hard drive is memory storage. This is long-term memory. Data can be retrieved from here & brought into RAM, & data can be stored here from RAM. But this is long term memory, and is stored on a disk drive separate from but connected to the motherboard.
1. The power cable is not connected to the hard drive. 2. The data cable is not connected to the hard drive. 3. The hard drive logic board has been damaged or is malfunctioning.
It's your hard drive, or tower. It's where all your memory is stored and also is the computer itself. Your keyboard is directly connected to it usually.
When a PC runs low on virtual memory, system activity causes what is called "thrashing", when memory is repeatedly paged out to, and read back from, the hard drive.
Most notebooks use a SATA Hard Disk Drive for storage. Typical notebook hard disk size is 250 to 500 GB. For RAM, practically all personal computers use flash (solid-state) memory. Typical notebook RAM is 2 to 4 GB.
A hard drive is static or nonvolatile memory.
flash memory drive
Notebook computers usually have hard drive capacities ranging from 160GB to 1TB. If the notebook is going to be a desktop replacement, one should go with one that has a larger hard drive.