If the BIOS supports it, you can.
You'll either have to go into BIOS and change the boot order or some computers will let you press F10 or F12 during boot up to display a boot menu that will let you choose from which disk you'd like to boot.
Your Bios has an option to boot from your DVD Drive or external drive. If the internal or external drive has no boot sector or disc with a boot sector the system will not boot. You will need to go into your bios at boot time most often by tapping your delete key or whatever option your motherboard bios requires and change the option back to boot from your hard drive.
Both internal and external hard drives can be removed from a computer provided that the PC does not boot from any of them. In that case, the first boot device would have to be a removable drive like CD-ROM/DVD-ROM or floppy drive.
In the boot under a floor cover. You will have 2 soleniods and the motor about centre at the rear of car (not boot)
Yes you can, when the computer is booting up open the boot menu and choose the external as your boot device, i have a external hard drive with Ubuntu on it and do exactly that, I'm sure it can work with windows.
what is computer boot sector
"Cold boot" means that the computer must be turned off then when it is turned back on it will "cold boot". A computer can reboot without turning off the power but some internal devices do not reset if the power does not go off. "Cold boot" forces everything to be restarted fresh.
If the computer is off the boot is called a cold boot or initial startup.If the computer is on the boot is called a warm boot or restart.
Yes, you should be able to install an operating to an external hard drive. You might have to set it to boot in the BIOS so you can install the OS. A computer needs an operating system to run, so as long as it is installed on a hard drive, it should not matter whether its internal or external. Remember, it depends on what port you are using depends on the speed, so if you have only usb, this will be a lot slower then your internal hard drive port. P ata, ide drive transfer speed- 133mb USB- 60mb Every port has a speed rating. So you don't want a slower port then your internal port.
Dual-boot and Multiple-Boot are pretty much synonymous.
Holding down the Option key while starting up a computer running Mac OS X will enter the Startup Manager from which the source for the computer to boot from can be selected. Ensure that external drives are powered and connected before turning on the computer. Intel based Macs can be booted from USB2 or FireWire drives while older Macs will not boot from USB drives.
1) if your motherboard BIOS allows you to select any "Boot Device" and, 2) if you have a boot device with the necessary Operating System files on it, then 3) Yes. Otherwise, No. Just remember you won't have access to ANY of the files on the C: drive - your programs or anything.
No, It is a paperweight. An operating system system is required to perform calculations or display graphics. Any media available to the BIOS that contains a boot image is sufficient, such as USB thumb drive/external hard drive, internal hard drive, carom, floppy disk, network *PXE boot, PCoIP zero client.