Yes, cloning creates absolute copy of your hard drive basically twin with identical content.
source drive
No. You need to have the flash drive unless you copied the files to the PC.
You can copy files to a hard drive, floppy drive, or some other kind of removable drive. You even can copy files to a CD or DVD drive if you are using re-writable media.
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.
To download Holden onto a thumb drive, you can copy the Holden files from your computer onto the thumb drive. These files may include documents, pictures, videos, or any other digital content related to Holden. Once copied, safely eject the thumb drive and it will be ready for use on another device.
The pics will remain on the computer if they were copied, rather than moved, onto a Flash drive. To move files, as opposed to copying, on a Mac hold down the Command key (cmd) and click and drag a file's icon. Or just delete unwanted files after they have been copied.
If you copied the files, then they will be in both places. If you cut or moved them, they would remain on the old drive until you complete the paste operation, at which time the file is removed from the file allocation table. your statement that u have made above is right but I am afraid you didn't understand my question properly, I already have copied files but I haven't paste them then one of my friend said that these files stored in 'Ram' with suitable place, is it right or not?
No. They are not copied to the computer's harddrive. Just the destination drive gets the files.
No, they don't disappear, unless you use the command move to...
Yes you can. I have done it many times.
the text files store in the document files the sound files store in the document files the pictures files store in the document files the video files store in the document files
No, Google Drive is used like any other disk connected to your computer. I save any files that I want to exchange between computers on Google Drive: spreadsheets, PDFs, text files, programs, ZIP files, etc.