go cmd in the windows run prompt
type dir /w
volume label is displayed as part of output.
The volume label on a computer is the name given to each drive or partition and is seen in "My Computer" which is accessed from the start menu bottom left corner of your main screen (desktop) it will look like this ( NEW DRIVE (C or New Drive (D ect) by left clicking on them slowly two times you can change their names, although the drive letter stays the same.
Typicly, in a majority of PC's, The main drive of a computer, the default storage and boot location is the C:/ Drive.You can See this on "My Computer" option.Default Hard Drive: C:/
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I believe it simply tells you what drive you are in. Such as C drive or D Drive.
The volume label on a computer is the name given to each drive or partition and is seen in "My Computer" which is accessed from the start menu bottom left corner of your main screen (desktop) it will look like this ( NEW DRIVE (C or New Drive (D ect) by left clicking on them slowly two times you can change their names, although the drive letter stays the same.
first, open your command prompt. type "convert driveletter: /fs:ntfs" so if you wanted to convert your c drive it would look like this "convert c: /fs:ntfs" minus the quotes of course. if you are converting the drive your OS is on you will be prompted to schedule the conversion when you restart your computer because this cannot take place while the system is running. when prompted to do so type Y. next you will be prompted to type the volume labe for the drive you are converting. to find out what youre volume label is, go to my computer (start menu) and find the drive you want to convert (c: e: etc.) there will be a small icon, a name/type, then the drive letter in parenthesis. the volume label is the name between the icon and drive letter. like this |icon| |icon| my book (N:) |icon| your drive label in this case would be "my book" after you enter the volume label hit enter and the conversion will begin, unless youre converting your primary drive, if so restart your computer. (if so this will be the thing you had to schedule earlier)
To just change the drive you are working on in a command window you can simply type the drive letter followed by a colon at the prompt. For example, type "D:" to switch to the D drive. This will switch you to the current directory in the target drive (each drive tracks its own current directory).If you want to change both the drive and the current folder in the target drive, use the /D option of the CD (change directory) command. For example, to change to the "Users" folder of the C: drive (regardless of the current drive or folder), type "CD /D C:\Users". Remember to put your target path in quotes if it contains spaces.Here are what the examples would look like in your command window:EXAMPLE 1C:\>D:D:\Current Directory>EXAMPLE 2D:\Photos>CD /D C:\UsersC:\Users>
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"C" is just a label given to a drive by Windows (or DOS but who runs that now?), however it's conventionally given to the first (by device enumeration) hard disk drive, which is usually where you boot from on a PC. Windows can be installed on either drive, however, so the file need not live on "C" but it will always live (without some tweaking that is not for the novice) on the root of the drive where Windows is installed. If you boot from "C", hiberfil.sys will live in "c:"
C
C drive
The volume increase.
That depends on how many drives or virtual drives you have on your computer. Mainly the C: drive has Windows on it, if you only have a C: drive all your information and programs go here, but if you have multiple drives C: drive should be mainly for your Windows operating system.
Drive C is a commonly used name which refers to the main location of storage contents on a hard drive. Hard drives have a pre-set amount of storage space, and there are two ways to increase storage space on a hard drive: 1. Purchase a new hard drive. In order to transfer necessary files from one hard drive to another, an intermediate storage medium is usually required before data from the original hard drive can be transferred to the new hard drive. 2. Clear unnecessary files from the hard drive. Drive D is usually partitioned away from the original amount of space on a hard drive, and is normally set aside to act as a recovery point for essential files and folders necessary to run the operating system. It is usually set aside in a manner that it cannot be recovered to Drive C, or a hard drive's main storage space.
If the dimensions of a cuboid are a, b and c, then its volume is a * b * c