To do this, you have to tell Windows to put the file there. First go to System in the Control Panel. Or you can hold down the Windows key and press Pause as a shortcut to get there from anywhere. Then go to Advanced and to Performance Settings. In there, open the Advanced Tab. Then select Change under Virtual Memory. Then you tell it you want none on the C: drive and the desired custom size on D: drive. One good strategy is to choose the recommended maximum and using that as the minimum size too.
The recommended size that Windows suggests varies with the version of Windows. Most prefer the same size swap file as you have physical memory. So if you have 4 Gb of memory, a 4 Gb swap file is recommended. Other versions like Windows 7 prefer 1.5 times the memory, so if you have 12 Gb, it will recommend an 18 Gb swap file.
Say you have song name "kajrare.mp3" in your D drive then you can create a batch file to play the song as follows:Go to run and type "cmd". It will open command shell.Go to the location where you want to create batch file say D drive. For this type "d:" and press enter.Now type "edit songs.bat" and press enter. It will open DOS editor. cd d:kajrare.mp3Write following entries:Now save the file by pressing Alt+F+S and exit the editor.A new batch file will create in your D drive. Just double click to run it.
The correct command for converting the D drive would be: "CONVERT D: /FS:NTFS" (without the quotes)
1) On any File Window go to Tools->Folder Options... 2) Click on the View tab. 3) Click on the Show all hidden and files and folder 4) Uncheck "Hide protected operating system files" 5) Type c: in the Address Bar 6) Delete the autorun.inf file 7) Restart your computer You will have to do this for all your drives.
c:\ attrib -h or +h (name of file) First of all change hidden file into nonhidden file then easly delete let file name is "MOON" in d:\ drive then first step [ d:\attrib -h d:\ moon ] Enter [ d:\del moon ] Enter ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Just execute the setup file through DOS. Say if your Mozilla setup file "mozilla.exe" is in D drive then just run the below command: C:\> d: D:\> mozilla and press enter..
You have to find out where the BOOT.INI is. You might have two of them. If you have two of them you can format the d drive. If you have one on the disk d you have to use restoring CD to put BOOT.INI file on disk C. Again if you have BOOT.INI on c you can format d.
Make the file by opening minecraft, click singleplayer, then click new file. Then navigate to .minecraft (click start, run, and type in %appdata%) Then click saves. Find your file and put it in your USB drive. And thats how! :D
Most likely, no. A 7200 RPM hard drive will have faster seek times and faster transfer rates. The most important thing, however, is that you've got enough memory and the right kind of operating system to reduce paging the memory into the hard drive. On Windows XP, I decided to completely disable the page file to speed things up. When you've got your paging under control, RPM shouldn't be too much of an issue. If you plan using the HD only for storage, I'd say 5400 RPM is enough.
Double clicking on a drive should open it on file explorer. The drive being opened by Notepad indicates that the default program assigned to open it is the notepad. exe. You can change this by going to the drive properties and changing the default program back to file explorer.
When you're working with a file and using application software the application is temporarily stored in a rom b the cpu c the hard drive or d ram?
simple,from now just install your software,games,applications on the d drive
keep your files in compressed folders or try to remove unnecessary contents