No, therefore it is false.
the most informative folder view option is the details view the tiles view does not show as much information
On most Windows computers, the usbio.sys is found in the system32 folder. This folder is in the Windows directory on the primary drive.
This depends on your Operating System. On a Windows OS, the most common and most important folders are Windows, system32 and most other folders inside the Windows folder, ProgramData, Program Files, Program Files (x86) (the installation folder for 32-bit programs on a 64-bit version of Windows), and Users.
Never delete anything from the WINDOWS folder in 'my computer'. This folder holds everything important that the computer need to run such as program files. The most important folder in WINDOWS is "System 32", never delete it.
The most vital of all files, is the WINDOWS, or WINNT folder. this contains your OS.
Is it in your C:\ folder? Most likely that was a partial install of a windows update. Perhaps the computer crashed or was forced to shut down during installation of a windows update, and that caused the temporary folder with the update code to be not deleted after installation. That is just a guess, though, based upon your limited description.
In any Windows system after Windows 3, you've removed the basic system dll's and the system will utterly fail either shortly after that or it will not start again at all. That folder is one of the most dangerous things to mess with in Windows.
Depending upon the Windows version, the folder used for cache files is different. For Windows 8, the most up-to-date version of Windows at present, the folder is named "INetCache."
No it is not, don't try it. You shouldn't mess around with anything in the C:\WINDOWS folder because most if not all of the files in there are required for windows to run properly, system32 in particular.
No it is not, don't try it. You shouldn't mess around with anything in the C:\WINDOWS folder because most if not all of the files in there are required for windows to run properly, system32 in particular.
Most Java objects seem to be 32KB and are located under your downloaded programs. If you double click on your "My Computer" icon then double click on "Local Disk (C:) " there you should find an area with a "Windows" folder double click on that and there should be a "Downloaded Programs" folder in which if you double click on that you will be able to then see your Java objects - OR - instead of going into the "Windows" folder you could double click on the "Programs" folder and there will be a "Java" folder in there (which ever you prefer).
The folder that you are downloading has been compressed into a single file, called an archive for portability. Special software is needed to extract the original folder from this file.Under Windows, WinRAR can open most types of these archive files. If WinRAR is installed using the normal settings, this can be done by right-clicking on the archive file, then selecting 'Extract to '.