the term is to use a large ginormous bananna and shove it in my anus
It depends what you are copying them to. If you are copying them to another hard drive, it will have a different drive letter. it is the same with USB drives.
Both hard drives have their own OS, one is win10 another one is win7 and win10 is the primary drive. They will be in the same tower and I want to move files from India
If you store your backup of your C:\ drive (which is usually where all your files, photos, etc are stored) on another (logical) partition on the same physical drive (C:\) and this is where you store your backup, if the drive should fail you would lose both the original files AND the backup as well. This is because they both reside on the SAME physical drive. Buy an inexpensive thumb drive or external hard drive and store your backups there. This way is the C:\ drive fails, you still have your backup files (on the external or flash (thumb) drive).
Yes in the same way as you would with any drive.
You just drag and drop same as moving a folder or file from one drive to another. You click on the file or folder on the flash drive, then drag it to the appropriate folder on the target drive that is a permanent part of the computer.
I am guessing you mean "Do backups stay in the PC after Format?" The answer is No, if you store the backups of the files on the same hard drive you are formatting. Its not technically a backup then anyway. To make a proper backup, you need to copy your files to a USB key, burn them to a CD or DVD, or copy them to another computer or hard drive.
If you rewrite your backup files. Then, yes your backup files will be rewrited (they might be the same or they can be different). The best way is to backup your files in another folder. If you are using standard window backup procedure your source files are safe because the windows backup utility just copies your files, but doesn't remove them. If you are using utility which wasn't a standard part of windows then you have to check settings very carefully. Some backup utilities do remove files instead of coping them.
Yes you can have the Mac OS on one drive and Windows on another drive. Or you can partition a single hard drive and have both on the same drive.
Drive Imaging!
After connecting your USB hard drive to your computer and it loads what it needs to run. It will act as another drive on you computer, you can copy to it the same way in which you copy files around your computer. Right Click the file. Click Copy. Open your drive using My Computer. Right Click an empty space. Click Paste. Another way to do this is via Windows Media Player. # Set up your hard drive so you can access any media files through WMP. # Go to the "Sync" tab. # Choose the device if there is more than one device installed in WMP (in this case, choose your hard drive). # Choose any pictures you want to upload and add them to a "sync list". # Once you have chosen all the files, start syncing the files to your hard drive.
In the same way how you access local disks, you just need to know an external drive name.
I guess you are meaning like how a USB Flash Drive says it's a 2 GB flash drive but when you look at the properties it has less than that? This is because there are files on the drive when you get. These files are the driver file and programming file that allow the drive to function. This files are embedded elsewhere on the device and cannot be accessed by any means. It is because of these files that the actual size of the device is lower than the displayed/advertised size.