You can rename it to A, B, or C. C: is just default, it will let you pick when you set up your OS.
B: Supercomputers
The A: and B: drives on a desktop computer are reserved in the BIOS for floppy disk drives. As most computers only come with one floppy disk drive only the A: drive will be visible in file explorer. If a second floppy disk drive is fitted then both A: and B: drives will be visible. Computers used to have a B: drive. It was the second floppy drive. Since people no longer copy from one floppy to another, the B: drive (and on some newer models the A: drive) has become obsolete.
There are a millions answers to this question, and I have found non that answer this detail about no B drive. The cool thing even before 3 1/2 inch disks, is you could just have 1 floppy drive and still be able the copy from one floppy to another. The B drive can work as a virtual drive. If need to copy somehting and had only one drive, you would issue a copy command and it would hold the information you want to copy on a virtual B drive. Place the original in, "copy to b drive" take out the original and put in a blank and it would copy the files to your B drive. This we found was always a cool tool. No need for a second floppy drive.
In the old days, computers had floppy drives. They usually had two, so you could put a program disk in drive A, and a data disk in drive B.Later computers kept two drives so they could support both formats: 5 1/4 inch, and 3 1/2 inches. By this time, hard drives were universal, and almost always installed as the C drive.AnswerOriginally, computers used floppy drives. The first drive was called "A:", then computers had 2 drives, A and B. Then... hard drives
D - Network.
10 GB is a capacity of hard-drive most likely. A GB (giga byte) is a unit of measurement for storing data (music, documents, photos etc.) on a computer. These days 10 GB is quite small. Most computers should come with a 200 GB hard drive at minimum as of 2009.
Idk but i dont think he shoulda drove as long as he did cause shes a b****.
a floppy ribbon cable that tricks the computer into using the drive as A:. This is done with the use of a special twist in the cable that electrically changes the DS configuration of the drive after the twist. This twist, then, causes the controller to think the drive configured as B: is really configured as A:. For this reason, during installation of a floppy drive, always make sure your Drive A: is located AFTER the twist on the floppy ribbon cable. If you are trying to use a non-standard floppy cable without a twist, you'll have to change the DS jumper to DS1, or the Drive A: setting.
Drive B is reserved for use with a(n additional) floppy drive
Drive B is reserved for use with a(n additional) floppy drive
rules of supplementaryexam of b com computers
The B: drive was originally used back in the days when having two floppy drives was common. A: and B: are reserved for floppy drive use.