It means to put it in Windows folder on your C drive. The easiest way to find this is to open My Computer and in the Address Bar type %WINDIR% . You'll get taken right to that folder.
Yes you need to put the file in the same directory. This will get the file to be executed from the HTML file.
Open the directory containing the music file and drag the file onto the documents and viola the song will be on your document
Open the file in in windows movie maker then click on publish movie, click on computer then wait 4 about 5 mins in makes it into a wmv file.
Start playing the video and put your cursor over it. Click convert and convert it to a Samsung Galaxy Tab file. Next, save the file and you will be able to put it into Windows Movie Maker.
You simply put a_ in the spot where the space was orginally. For example: you_simply_put ......
convert it into .DAT format
If you're talking about installing Zombie Mod on your CS server, you need to compile the .amxx file and place it in "plugins" in your AMX Mod X directory. Then, extract the zombie mod files into your "cstrike" directory.
In your home directory create .fonts directory if don't exist. Then you easy copy .ttf file into it. (Offcourse you can also make a dir in .fonts and there put .ttf font.)
In Linux, the media directory typically contains mount points for removable media such as USB drives and CDs. By default, when a removable storage device is mounted, it is usually assigned a directory within /media, named after the device or volume label. For example, if a USB drive is inserted, a directory like /media/username/USB_DRIVE_NAME is created to access its files. No specific file type is created by default; rather, the directory serves as a mount point for the file system on the removable device.
in cmd type "md FileName" in the directory you want the folder. md= Make Directory. And where FileName is you would put what ever name you wanted.
Yes, Just copy the entire WindowsNT/Pinball directory to a flash drive, or fileshare off old computer with the game on it, then download it into whatever directory you want it to reside in on the new Win7 computer (I put mine right onto C: drive). Just run the pinball.exe file and all will work.
When you delete a file using File Explorer or Windows Explorer, Windows typically moves the file to the Recycle Bin instead of permanently deleting it. This allows users to recover the file if needed. The file remains in the Recycle Bin until it is either restored or the bin is emptied, at which point the file's data is marked as available for new data but may still be recoverable with specialized tools until overwritten.