Go to start, then my computer, right clickon your C drive, go to properties and hey presto, it shows you how much used space and free space you have.
because it lets you know how much free space you have left to put more stuff on.
Unused disk space is space on a hard drive (or another kind of disk such as a CD) which has not had any digital information written onto it or is free to be written over. Example: you buy a brand new 100GB hard drive and the only thing on it is your copy of Windows7 64-bit. About 20 GB of the hard drive are required to store the Windows7 operating system on, so you would have around 80GB left that is "free." This is unused disk space. An interesting fact, too: when you delete something by putting it into your "recycle bin" and deleting it, it doesn't actually "go" anywhere. The computer does not go in and actually "erase" that information from your hard drive, it just notes that the area where that information was stored is now "free" to be written over with new information, so this also counts toward "unused disk space."
You are going to have to free up some space on your hard drive. You have too small of a hard drive for the programs installed. Start removing programs you don't need. Next start removing videos & photos. Keep removing stuff until you get around 12-15% free space. Also def ragging in safe mode will help.
I think you can get every version. If you want to buy 32-bit version, you must have at least 1 GB of RAM (you have 2, ok, it will work) and 16 GB of hard disk (you have 27 GB of hard disk left, ok, it will work).If you want to buy 64-bit version, you must have at least 2 GB of RAM (you have 2, that's minimum, but your computer could work slowly, so it's best that you get additional 1 GB of RAM) and 20 GB of hard disk space (ok).
The primary yet most dangerous cause is the malware infection. Other reasons include fragmented hard disk, corrupted Windows registry, remnants left after uninstalling large applications, hard drive bad sector errors, not enough free disk space, too many startup programs running at one time, outdated ASUS device drivers, etc.
Hard drive space, is frequently located in "my computer" and can easily tell you have much space you have used, and the amount of space that you have left. Simply click on "my computer", and choose the drive that you wish to look at. If you already have done this and would like to know how to clean up some of the space to widen your capacity, you may want to do a system restore, and a disk defragment, to compress some of the widely spread data eating up your space. The bottom line is, you'll want to check the "my computer" file visible by simply clicking the icon on your computer.
There is a hardisk drive inside the computer but say your computer crashes or a virus wipes it all then it is al left so some people created the external hard disk drive as an alternate storage device. It is basically like an extra large USB key.
You will need at least 7.5 Gb free hard drive space for Left 4 Dead.
On desktop, click hard drive icon to select it. Go to file menu and select Get Info. (or simply "right-click" on hard drive icon and choose Get Info.) You will see "Capacity" of drive, and "Available" and "Used" space. Note: you may have several "hard drive icons" on a single physical drive. That is because the Mac treats each partition as a separate drive. To see all partitions, launch the "Disk Utility.app". On the left side, it will list all the partitions on each physical drive, whether mounted on the desktop or not. You can select any partition and click on "info" at top of the "Disk Utility" window to see space used and free space on that partition.
Here are the steps how u can make partitions >Right click on My computer and then on Manage >Then click on Disk Management >Right-click an unallocated region of a basic disk, and then click New Partition, or right-click free space in an extended partition, and then click New Logical Drive >In the New Partition Wizard, click Next, click Primary partition, Extended partition, or Logical drive, and then follow the instructions on your screen. Hope my answer is perfect
I have installed Windows XP on a 200Mhz Pentium, so it is possible, but there won't be much disk space left after that. There are "light" Windows XP versions for netbooks around the net that might help.
The extra 8 MB left on your disk happens when the Microsoft operating system was used to create the partitions on the disk. It leaves the extra 8 MB in case you ever decide you want to convert your hard drive to a dynamic disk in windows, in which case it will use those extra 8 MB. You can find more information on Dynamic Disks by doing a web search.