TRUE
No the average USB flash drive is around 4 GBs (with a max of 64 GBs) when the average HDD (hard drive) is around 750 GBs on a personal computer (reaching all the way to 5 TBs AKA 5,000 GBs).
False
true
No, an external disk drive and a flash drive are not the same. An external disk drive typically refers to a device that uses spinning disks, like a hard disk drive (HDD) or a solid-state drive (SSD), and connects to a computer via USB or other ports. In contrast, a flash drive, often called a USB drive or thumb drive, uses flash memory for storage and is usually smaller and more portable. While both serve as storage solutions, their mechanisms and typical uses differ.
You can't. You have to buy a 16gb flash drive.
To transfer information from a flash drive to another flash drive the information must be uploaded to a computer from flash drive A then uploaded from the computer to flash drive B.
That, of course, depends on the size of your flash drive. A typical DVD quality movie would range from 700 Mb to 1 Gb in size. Note that the size mentioned on your flash drive is always a bit more than it can handle!
Flash memory storage devices that plug into USB ports are commonly referred to as USB thumb drives. USB thumb drives come in a variety of shapes, sizes, and capacities and are often used for transporting files from one computer to another.
You can write to a flash drive and read data from the flash drive. It acts the same as a miniature hard drive, just like the one on your computer. It uses flash memory, hence the name flash drive.
A flash drive is hardware.
flash memory drive
Yes, a flash drive stores information.