You are not able to transfer the recordings from the DVR receiver to your computer. The programming language used for the receiver is different than that used for computers.
You can use an external hard drive connected to your receiver to give you more storage capacity.
It's either you use a USB cable or an HDMI cable.
A printed copy of computer output is called a hard copy.
It's called - a Virus.
There are software programs that can copy Blu-ray disks.
You could copy a video game as long as its on a disk and if you have the right programs on your PC
Cartoon Network's channel number varies. It depends on your cable / satellite TV provider. You can find the correct number by looking at your provider's TV guide. If you don't have a physical copy, check the provider's website.
You can request they send a list or sometime the local TV guidse show cable channels.
If you have a home network or are on a network at the office you may have network drives or locations that you access frequently or copy data to and from on a regular basis. To make this process easier you can map a network drive to your network location.
Yes, you can use the iPhone PC cable to copy music from your iPhone to PC.
yes they do
Connect it to your PC with a USB cable, and copy it across.
The easiest way - IF both mobiles are on the same network (or the handsets are unlocked) - is to simply swap the SIM cards, and transfer the data to the new phone's memory. If they're not on the same network or are locked, you'll have to use a USB cable to copy the data to a computer - then back to the new handset.
(The following assumes that the hard disk is still in working condition.) If the hard disk is in a computer, you can connect it with another computer over a network, and copy the files over the network. You can also connect the old hard disk to your new computer (using a second hard disk cable); in this case, if you manage to make it work, you can copy the files from one disk to another. In this case, the copying itself should be much faster than copying files over a network.