Yes you can. I have done it many times.
The best way to do it is to right click the original file and select "copy." Then proceed to "My Computer" locate the second drive and open it. Once it is opened right click any empty space and select "Paste." Good luck!
To create more space on it for other files.
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.
Hold down the Ctrl key as you click the files.
It means that it has both SSD drive in for caching and frequently used files and plate-based hard drive for all other files.
It means that it has both SSD drive in for caching and frequently used files and plate-based hard drive for all other files.
Alright. let us assume the memory card is a USB, or zip drive. First, insert the USB into your laptop or computer. Then, save it n your computer by copying it and pasting it. finally, take out the first zip drive and insert the other one, and copy and paste the memory from the computer t he zip, as you did before. And there you have it!
in a hard drive
fire wire, map both drives cut and past Connect them both to the computer and copy the contents from one hard drive and paste it into the other. If you don't have enough USB interfaces ( connections) to connect them both then make a folder on your desktop and copy the files from the source hard drive into the folder on your desktop. Then connect the destination hard drive and move the contents from the desktop o your destination drive. From the Book on Hardware written by ME Need a copy Check the stats
First off, insert a CD into your drive. Then open My Computer and notice the drive the CD was inserted in. Next, find your files on you computer and have that window side by side with the window showing the drive with the CD inserted. Then select the files in the other window with the left click on the mouse and while holding the left click down, drag-and-drop the files on the drive (To select multiple files you can use a shift method where you click on the first file of the set of files then scroll to the bottom to the final file of the set and while holding shift, click the final file. This method will select all the files between the two. If you only want certain ones you can use the Ctrl method where you start off clicking one of the many files you want, then on the next file hold Ctrl and click. You can continue Ctrl clicking until all your files are selected. Once they are all selected, then click and hold one of the highlighted files and drag and drop them onto the drive on the other window. You'll notice that it is actually dragging and dropping all the files that were selected). After that is complete, follow the step that Windows provides in burning the CD with the files. Another way and perhaps less confusing would be using a free CD burning program found anywhere online. Using such a program simplifies the process by giving you an interface where all you do is drag and drop then click a "burn" button and it'll burn the files. Anything specific that you need further help on regarding this question, feel free to ask.
You can do this a few different ways: 1. You can drag the files onto the USB Flash Drive image, which will be located on your Desktop; 2. You can open the USB Flash Drive and drag files into its window; 3. You can open the folder your files are in, then drag the files onto the USB Flash Drive image located in the "Devices" section in the Finder window.
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.