The Capacity is not dictated by the software, but more along the lines of your hardware. Windows is capable of storing up to 26 drives with Letters A-Z but usually 3 of those letters is in use by Peripherals such as CD drives and Burners along with floppy drives or removable media. Hypothetically you should be able to store numerous terrabytes of information. There really is no set limit that I know of.
5 GB
At least 128MB of RAM available here,& 1.5GB of available hard disk space...........
At least 128MB of RAM available here,& 1.5GB of available hard disk space...........
It have 512mb
Answer: Most likely because of swap-file. Swap-files are used by windows to supplement your systems RAM. No matter how much RAM you have, its never enough for windows, so it takes chunks of your hard disk and uses them for short-term storage for stuff its currently working on. If you have a lot of programs running in the background this can take over a gigabyte of hard disk space easily. When displaying hard disk free space, windows doesnt take swap-files into account & thus it may show as having free space when in fact there isnt. For the health of your hard disk, and to ensure good system performance, it is a good rule of thumb to always keep at least 10% free space on your hard disk. Filling it up to 99% or 100% can often cause data corruption.
no
depends on how much space your hard drive or solid state drive can hold.
During installation, Windows 7 will need about 16GB on a hard drive.
All of the "old data" that has not been overwritten can be recovered in Windows and MS-Dos. When a file is deleted in Windows / MS-Dos the first character of the file name is changed to a question mark. This releases the allocated disk space of the deleted file to the free disk space. The data itself is not touched until a program overwrites the data in that allocated space. This is not true of most other operating systems.
One can see how much disk space is free on their hard drive in Microsoft Vista using a few simple steps. First, go to the start menu and click on Computer. Next, select the hard drive to view. The disk space information will appear at the bottom of the folder window.
since Virtual Memory utilizes Hard Disk space it is really only limited by how much free space you have on your hard drive
A new (but empty) folder in Windows occupies just 2K of disk space.