Windows 98 does not include drivers for USB Mass Storage devices. A generic driver is available, however.
No, you cannot convert a TiVo into a mass storage device or use it as extra storage for another TiVo. TiVo devices are designed to function as standalone DVRs with specific software that does not support storage expansion or repurposing. While some TiVo models allow for external hard drives to be added for additional recording space, they cannot be used as general mass storage devices for other applications.
Sanjay Ranade has written: 'Mass storage technologies' -- subject(s): Computer software, Computer storage devices, Optical storage devices
Windows XP SP3
It has the drivers for Mass Storage Devices, but not the apple ipodservice.exe, Apple Mobile Device Support or ituneshelper.exe is required for recognition of the iPod
There are a couple of ways. Many phones offer access to internal or external disk space by mass storage mode, similar to any USB flash drive. There are _rare_ viruses that propagate by attaching themselves to storage devices plugged into your machine. The thing is, this is is not a big threat at all. Mass storage devices cannot autorun in Windows. Most it could do is add an extra option to the device action list that the user would then have to choose.
There is only one your HDD, unless your thinking of Factory Image and that?
windows does not need to know the device name if it shows the device as a mass storage device.
Yes. Any hard drive, flash drive, or other external storage device that conforms to the USB Mass Storage device standard will work on Windows Vista.
Any external hard drive that presents itself as a standard USB Mass Storage device should work in Windows ME. This is about 95% of the drives on the market. Note that large hard drives may perform very slowly with the FAT32 file system, and Windows ME does not support NTFS.
Flash memory is a term used for solid state devices. They are called solid state because they have no moving parts and the data is "flashed" to the device. Mobile phones use flash memory, USB storage devices or even large mass storage devices can be bought as solid state.
Flash memory is a term used for solid state devices. They are called solid state because they have no moving parts and the data is "flashed" to the device. Mobile phones use flash memory, USB storage devices or even large mass storage devices can be bought as solid state.
Any MP3 player that presents itself as a USB Mass Storage device should work on Windows ME. The Archos 5, for instance, should work.