This information you can find in Windows Explorer.
Wow ur a n00b
Select Start Menu, then Computer. Then right click on the C: drive and select properties.You will then see that the graphic type that displays information about the C: driveis a PIE CHART.N.C.F.
Windows Explorer displays the hierarchical structure of files, drives, and folders on your computer. Furthermore it displays any network drives that have been mapped to drive letters on your computer. Using Windows Explorer, you can copy, move, rename, and search for files and folders.
You can create a shared folder on your hard drive and copy all data from the pen drive in the folder. Or you can share your pin drive right click on the drive (or folder) Security and sharing...
Plug your flash drive into the USB port on the computer. If a folder does not pop-up immediately, go to your "My Computer" folder and find the USB drive there. Open the folder for the USB drive. Also open the folder the document folder containing the files that you want to put on the flash drive. Drag the documents over to the flash drive folder and a copy will be placed in the folder. Once all of the desired documents have been copied over, you can remove the flash drive from the computer.
The folder "System Volume Information" is a hidden system folder located in the root of the drive and is used by windows to hold system restore points. C:\System Volume Information\_ Restore folder
To create a folder on an external hard drive double click on the hard drive's icon and select New Folder from the Finder's File menu.
In the Applications folder is a folder called Utilities. In the Utilities folder is Disk Utility. Disk Utility will Erase / Partition / Format a hard drive.
You just copy your data to the hard drive somehow. It is just a matter of finding out how the system identifies the hard drive and accessing that device.For instance, in MS-DOS, if you wanted to copy something to the hard drive you could issue a command such as:COPY A:\*.* C:\That would copy the entire contents of the root directory of the floppy in drive A: to the root directory of the hard drive identified as drive C:.On Windows, if you have something on a CD in drive E: that you want to copy to drive C:, you could just drag and drop it. Just open up the 2 windows that you want to copy between, make the selections on the source folder, and drag them to the window of the destination folder.
For a Windows PC, click the START button (usually in the bottom left corner of the display. Select MY COMPUTER. Then you can right-click on the drive icon (say the "C:" drive) and select PROPERTIES. This opens a window that provides information about the drive and includes information such as the drive capacity and used and free space on the drive.
To copy a folder to a thumb drive, first, plug the thumb drive into your computer. Open File Explorer (Windows) or Finder (Mac), locate the folder you want to copy, and right-click it. Select "Copy," then navigate to your thumb drive in the file explorer, right-click in the destination area, and select "Paste." The folder will then be copied to your thumb drive.
To create a folder for downloading movies to your USB flash drive, first, insert the USB drive into your computer and open it. Right-click in the USB drive window and select "New" > "Folder," then name the folder (e.g., "Movies"). You can now save or move your downloaded movies into this newly created folder for easy access. Make sure to safely eject the USB drive once you're done.