Sure, just click the icon and then open.
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.
View it my computer
By clicking on the "computer" button on your start list, then find the name of your flash drive, then click on it.
Click the Apple logo top left of screen and then choose About This Mac. Then click more info. Now click storage on the next screen.
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
No. Go visit Apple.com to view the latest on iMac and MacBook. This is the best way to view Mac based products.
hey man it's a simple job k .....just goto properties option by right clicking on that drive
Yes, make sure the flash drive is in the computer and then go to the game and click view then click source. After that you do Ctrl F and type in .swf when it come up copy the URL it's in and paste it on to the URL on to the top. Then go to file and click save as and then save it on to your flash drive. [make sure none of the original URL on top doesn't get deleted].
No, the Macromedia Flash Player is a free Adobe product used to stream media on the Internet. Any file with an .flv suffix is a Flash Player file. All YouTube videos, for example, are played (streamed) Online by the Flash Player so you do not have to download them to view them. If you can view YouTube videos, you have the Flash Player installed on your system. If you do not have this installed and try to watch an .flv video, you will get a message that you must install this player in order to view the video. This message includes a link so you can install the player immediately. Everyone should have this player on their system. A flash drive is a removable data storage device that works the same way as a CD or DVD, but which plugs into one of your USB ports and can hold far more data.
Windows Movie Maker is designed for PCs, not Macs.
It would be hard to view it as such from a modern perspective. it uses a bulky and power-intensive CRT screen, a small hard drive, low RAM, and a very slow (by modern standards) processor.