1. open "my computer" or the root directory window 2. right click on your virtual drive (where you have mounted the .ISO file) 3. select the "unmount" option OR try other permutations of the above procedure depending on which version of daemon tools you're running (you should be able to do it from the Daemon Tools control panel as well)... cheers...
Let's say you have a PC game that requires you to have the disk. Daemon tools can make the whole disk of that game go on one file on your computer. Then Daemon tools can take that one file and put it on a virtual drive on your computer. So then you can play the PC game without the disk and copy the game.
You can't, it has to be in the computer to access it.
To remove fragments from a hard drive you can run a disk defragmenter usually found under the advanced tab of the computer properties menu(found by right clicking on my computer or computer)
Assuming there is only one hard drive on the computer, then yes.
A program which emulates a drive, or in other words a program which fools the computer into thinking that a folder or a file is a harddisk/cd/dvd/bluray/whatever. Examples: Alcohol 52% DAEMON Tools Lite WinCDEmu
Format hard drive/s
my computer--->manage->computer management ---->select drive drive and right click delete partition
You need at least an Operating System Like Windows or Linux to work on the computer, if you remove that one too then you need to reinstall it , so as to work on the computer again.
You need to mount the image to play. Use a program like Daemon Tools. It's free I think. Daomon Tools will create a drive on your computer and trick your computer into thinking that it's a disk drive like your dvd-rom. Next, mount the game you downloaded onto that new drive. Start your game normally and your computer will automatically think that you have the game disk in that drive.
It may have a virus in it. -> It could be a security function of the computer, a virus executing off the flash drive, or an unwanted program on the host computer. Also, if changing computers, you may have disk caching enabled, and the information isn't getting written to the flash drive before you remove it. Make sure to use the "Safely remove drive" utility on Windows before removing a usb, and search Google to check that Disk Caching is disabled.
Before you send your computer to the electronics graveyard, remove the hard drive. If the computer still functions, you can erase the hard drive.
In 1973, IBM developed the Winchester computer drive