I guess if you copy the files or option drag the sites
Certainly. Copy the files and paste them to the flash drive. They stay on your hard drive.
To transfer information from a flash drive to another flash drive the information must be uploaded to a computer from flash drive A then uploaded from the computer to flash drive B.
A external usb jump drive. Plug it in, open to view files, paste your file there. Plug it into the computer, view files and copy and paste it in your documents
To transfer files from one computer to another computer in a different location. Also can be used as temporary storage.
Open up the Flash Drive from the desktop, create a new folder out of the flash drive, select the files in the Flash Drive, then drag-and-drop the files into the folder.
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. You need to have the flash drive unless you copied the files to the PC.
Transfer using usb flash drive..very easy..can be slow on older computers
Any Flash drive can be used for that purpose. Just plug the Flash drive into your computer, open "My Computer", open the Flash drive, and drag and drop your documents.
No.
To get your flash drive unstuck, you will probably have to use as much of your strength and pull it out of your computer. Luckily, you will not lose any of your files as long as the flash drive itself is not damaged.
You can't transfer the entire program. However, you can transfer the installation wizard in order to install it on another machine. To do this you would have to burn the disk image to the computer, extract it, and transfer the necessary installation files to the flash drive.
If you click and drag the files into the flash-drive file, then yes. If you copy and paste the items onto the drive, then no.