Partially. The answer is a little complicated as what a computer does is governed by a combination of hardware, firmware, and software.
Typically the Operating System or Boot Code can be stored on a hard disk drive, so in this way the hard drive tells the computer what to do.
However, there are computers that do not have hard drives or run from removable media. In that case the operating system is not run from the hard drive.
The computer hard disk and CPU have completely different purposes. Your question asks "or", so I will tell you that the hard disk stores data and programs. Having answered that the "or" means I must not tell you what the CPU does.
The computer doesn't "use" anything. When the hard drive is filled, no further data can be written to it, and the computer does not magically place data somewhere else. Manual intervention can tell the operating system to start storing data somewhere else, such as another hard drive, floppy disk, USB Flash drive, etc...
You tell me stupid.... Just joking. You can remove the hard disk if the machine holding it breaks. Example: I am using my hard drive to save stuff and then it breaks. what do i do? remove the hard disk (with professional assistance of course).
Pros are white with a chrome disk drive cover and 20gb hard driveElites are black with a chrome disk drive cover and 120gb hard drivexD
go to my computer and click any drive.for eg. C drive.right click the c drive icon,choose properties.the disk space in your computer will be shown in the form of a pie chart.there is also an option called disk clean up to clean up the disk.
You will need to open up the disk management window on you computer. To do this open up the control panel and search for "partition" then click the link that says "Create and format hard disk partitions". From here you can view and modify all the partitions on any disk on your computer.
The most common "drives", or storage devices, on a computer are hard drives and optical (CD/DVD/Blu-Ray) drives. Floppies were originally quite common, but have not been included on any new computers. USB-attached drives are common, but arguably not used on a single computer very often.
Yes. The hard drive will tell ME2 that you have ME1 saves. It doesn't matter if there's a disk or not, it all goes to your hard drive.
If you mean physically - the computer is missing, or there is a space inside where the hard-drive once was.
go to start>and right click on computer, then properties, it will tell you there on the opening window.
Normally, the floppy drive light comes on so the computer can tell if there is a boot disk in there. If there is a floppy in the drive that is not a boot disk the windows will stop loading until the floppy is removed.
Yes, but let a technician check your Hard disk drive if it still works. Depending on how damage your computer is. If it wont work, just download it again. Tiresome but cautious effective way. No one can tell, maybe your old HDD will blow up your new one. Generally, you can transfer your songs from the hard drive in the old computer to the one in the new one, unless of course the hard drive is what was wrong with the old one. If the old computer is not working, you can remove the hard drive and hook it up in the new machine. I have yet to see a hard drive damage other components in a PC, and I've moved lots of hard drives between machines. It is not to say that is impossible, I've just never seen it.