When you veiw a picture using America Online browser you will automatically have the picture saved in your temporary folder. This includes any and all graphics you see anywhere. These files are extremely hard to locate and are basically numbered in the order recieved. In addition, temporary files are deleted on occasion by users to keep computers in good working order. If you look at a picture in the browser and you are asked by the computer to either "open" or "save" the picture, then you may have saved the picture conviently. If you chose open, the picture is lost to the void of temporary files. If you chose save, then it will be saved where you indicate and by a name you indicate.
Go to my computer then select the drive where your hard drive is (usually c:) it is usually labeled as something like local disk c: then you are able to view everything saved to your hard drive
This is usually a folder view option.
No...absolutely not. You can remove all sources of power to a PC and the hard drive will retain all information saved on it. You could even go so far as to remove the hard drive from the PC (always with caution and extreme care) and hook it up as a slave to another PC and still view files saved on that hard drive.
If the files are still on the USB drive, you can open them, even though they were never saved to the actually computer. The USB drive is a portable hard drive, plugging into your computer gives you access to view what is on the USB drive without having to save them to the actual computer.
View it my computer
The Hard Drive Property Window.
Clcik on the planet in the galactic view with a picture of your cell/creature you want to play with on it.
It allows you to view files and folders on your hard drive.
Yes
no but you need a hard drive to view films in threatre
See the related links for a picture of a Google Street View car. The picture should answer the question. And yes, they literally did drive these or something very like them down every street for which there are street view images.
Windows does not store an image unless the picture is actually saved to the harddrive.