Very well.
A single system can share many disks.
there are several protocols that have various methods of dealing with multi-disk systems.
Check the internet for RAID which is a group of protocols for redundant arrays of disks, some protocols allow one disk to fail and be replaced while the system still remains running and no data is lost.
Yes you can do that. They manufacture hard disks for xbox.
no only wii or gamecube disks work
they work together
yes. as long as the playstation has the addon saved onto the hard drive then it should work.
the organ system will not work together
work hard
The same way the disks works on the ps1. just put the disk in, and close the top, and let the system do its work.
The work together by.....
When different organs work together, they work together as a system.
work station domain
A system is a group of organs that work together like the digestive system. While a body is a group of systems that work together. You are not just your digestive system but also your musculoskeletal system, urogenital system, endocrine system and nervous systems that work all together.
Answer: This isn't the only reason this could happen, but the most likely explanation is this. The hard disk has not been partitioned. Open up control panel & go to administrative tools & then open "computer management" Once you have computer management open, look for "disk management" under storage in the left pane. Disk management will give you a list of your hard disks. Youll probably see disk 0 & itll say whatever the size is & whatever your file system is (NTFS most likely) have a look at disk 1 (or 2, or 3) and if it says "unallocated" right click on it & itll give you options for partitioning and formatting the drive. Note, when formatting hard disks in XP, always choose the quick format, regular format takes eons on a large hard disk, quick format takes seconds. If that's not your problem, and youre using ATA hard disks (not SATA) then you may have a conflict with your hard disks jumper settings. Make sure your master / slave jumper settings are set up. Basically any two hard disks sharing a channel (on the same data cable) must be jumpered such that one is set for master and the other for slave. Many times, setting both hard disks for CS (cable select) will work as well. Other posibilites include BIOS not being able to recognize hard disks that size, Power supply not adequate for new system configuration,