A microusb is something you put a microSD card in the you put the microUSB into your usb slot to download to the microSD
You can try deleting it using a microUSB to microUSB cable.
0 / Standard, MiniUSB, and MicroUSB are the three sizes. Enjoy!
The speaker has a microUSB port, which I assume is for charging its internal battery. If that is the case any USB AC adapter and a USB to microUSB cable (see image) to connect them should work just fine.
You can either connect it via microUSB to USB. Or, you can connect wirelessly with an app such as AirDroid or WiFi File Transfer.
Any charger that connects to the USB to microUSB and that pushes 500mA or more will charge it. Also, any computer with USB
If your Galaxy SIII will not charge completely, you may need a new battery.
You can either move it via a USB to microUSB cable, through a cloud transfer app such as AirDroid, Dropbox, Google Drive and others, or you can also upload music into Google Music, and that music can be played cross-platforms, including the Galaxy Nexus.
If you managed to allow Google to save your photos into Google Photos or Google+, then your photos should have all uploaded there. If not, and your Galaxy S4 can function again with either a replacement battery or connecting it to a microUSB charger, that may be your other option.
As with any Android, simply connect your phone to your computer using a MicroUSB cable and pull down the notifications pane. You'll see that your phone recognizes that it's connected to a computer. Select "USB Mass Storage" and drag-and-drop your music into the Music folder on your Android's SD card.
The phones were released about four months apart, the HD2 coming out first. Their specs have some similarities, but some notable differences as you see below:HTC HD2448 MB RAM, 512 MB ROM internal memory, microSD slot4.3 inch TFT touchscreen (480x800 pixels, 217 ppl)microUSB chargingBluetoothStereo FM radioWAV ringtonesLi-Ion 1230 mAh batteryHTC Google Nexus One512 MB RAM, 512 MB ROM internal memory, microSD slot3.7 inch AMOLED touchscreen (480x800 pixels, 252 ppl)microUSB charging v. 2.0BluetoothtrackballMP3 ringtonesLi-Ion 1400 mAh batteryThe HD2 uses Microsoft Windows as it's OS (6.5 Professional), with Sense UI. The Nexus One uses stock Android OS (2.1, eventually to 2.3.6). You can modify the Nexus One's OS to run Android 4.4, which is several generations ahead of the phone's operational life. On the HD2, it may be possible to run the latest Windows OS (8.1), or you can port Android OS into it to extend it's operational life.
i have one and you use the cord with the usb connection and plug it in and lift the little thing on your phone to plug in the other end. Then you need to put in your computer one of the little discs you got and put the software from it on your pc. You should be good from there ... unlike me
Most frequently, this is a problem with a driver, bad charging cord, or incompatible device. You might also make sure that the port you are attempting to use is at least USB 2.0 if not USB 3.0. Admittedly, all USB ports manufactured in the past few years have been USB 2.0 at a minimum but if you have an older computer, you may have only USB 1.1 and that could be what is causing you fits.If you have other devices that use the same type of connector (such as microUSB) to charge, then try plugging such a device into the same cord and see whether the charging works for it. If so, then the problem will not be with the USB port or cord, so that narrows it to the driver or the MP3 player itself.Without knowing more or seeing it, there is not too much more that I can tell you, so I hope this helps to point you in the right direction. If you have other questions, however, or would like to discuss this further, feel free to drop me a line. I'm always glad to help.