In the folder you want the warning to be shown again, on the left side is a menu called "System Tasks". The first link under this heading is, "Hide the contents of this drive." Click that link and the warning should reappear.
EFS stands for Encrypted File System and is used to encrypt folders and files in Windows XP or Vista.This encryption works ONLY when using the Windows NTFS file system!
NTFS
Yes. Ubuntu can read files and directories created by a Windows system.
Windows stores the files and folders necessary for booting the computer primarily in the System Reserved partition and the Windows operating system partition. The boot manager and Boot Configuration Data (BCD) are located in the System Reserved partition, while essential system files are found in the Windows directory of the OS partition (usually C:\Windows). Additionally, the boot loader, known as bootmgr, plays a critical role in initiating the boot process.
You can find it in the Windows folder which is on the system hard drive. You will not able to see system32 if you have the options "Hide system files and folders" on. To turn it off you have to go Start->My Computer->Tools->Folder Options...->View->Advanced settings, Show hidden files and folders and you have to uncheck "Hide protected operating system files".
Only the files and programs that users specify are available offline
You should not mess with any system files unless you absolutly know what you are doing.
In Windows 7, folders can also be referred to as "directories." This term is commonly used in computing to describe a location in the file system that can contain files and other directories. Additionally, users might informally call them "file folders" or simply "folders" in the context of organizing files.
In windows operating system it is called "Windows Explorer", file name: "explorer.exe".
The first level directly in the root folder typically contains system files and directories that are essential for the operating system's operation. Common files and folders include system directories like "bin," "etc," "home," "lib," and "usr" in Unix-like systems, while Windows systems might have folders like "Program Files," "Windows," and "Users." Additionally, there may be hidden files like "bootmgr" for boot management. The exact contents can vary based on the operating system and user customizations.
False, the operating system is not responsible for storing files and folders on a secondary storage device.
The operating system (Windows, Linux, MacOS, etc.) is the basic software on your computer and that it just controls the file system on your hard drive.