The "total amount of drive space" is whatever the capacity of your hard drive(s) is.
windows
The easiest way, on windows, is to open up "my computer" and right-click on your hard drive (usually drive C or D) and select properties. Total, used, and free space is displayed with a pie chart.
Drive space usage is how much memory used from the total hard drive space. It's basically how many stuff you put into a hard drive compartment.
depends on the Hard Drive.... if you've got a version of windows goto: My computer right click on the HD in question choose properties on the drop down list you'll see a pie chart of your hard drive listing used/free and total space
It stands for page file usage. Page file usage is the variable amount of hard drive space that is dedicated to your total system memory.
It is the total amount of storage space consumed on the disk. In web hosting, its the total amount of storage space you are using, HTML files, images, logs, etc.
Electrons occupy a small amount of the total space inside an atom. They are negatively charged particles that move around the nucleus, which contains protons and neutrons. The majority of the volume within an atom is actually empty space.
Windows doesn't support partitioned USB Drives. By default, formatting such a device under Windows will create a single partition utilizing the total space of the disk. There are some utilities which may allow the creation of multiple partitions, but it is not recommended, or supported.
The amount of space that gas particles can take up is the size of the container, but the amount between them also is determined by the amount of space the gas takes up.
Total amount of space it takes up.
The amount of space an object takes up is referred to as its volume. Volume is a measurement of the total amount of space an object occupies in three-dimensional space and is typically measured in cubic units such as cubic meters (m³) or cubic centimeters (cm³).
The following applies to Windows XP and below only. First, open My Computer. Then, right click the icon of the hard drive and choose 'Properties' from the menu that appears. On this screen there will be a pie chart which shows how much free space (pink) there is compred to how much space is used (blue). To get the exact figure, look above at the key which states how many bytes and gigabytes are free on your hard drive. For those running Windows Vista, it is even easier: open Computer from the desktop or start menu, and on the window that appears, under the drive named BOOT there should be text telling you how many gigabytes are free, and how many gigabytes your hard drive can hold in total.