Saving game to your hard drive can lead to faster load times, and the xbox will make less noise because the disk drive will not be spinning.
Only as fast as its CPU. Doesn't matter the size of the hard drive - the hard drive does not determine processor speed.
Yes PS3 uses a standard lap top hard drive and you do not even need to use one from PS3
you can delete it by transferring it to an extrenal hard drive, I believe.
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:/
No. The PlayStation 1 does not come with a hard drive, does not have an expansion bay for one, and no official add-ons provide such functionality.
Documents, pictures, music, games, addresses, emails
You shouldnt have to. When you download the content, it will store it on your hard drive memory. Test you hard drive by saving games, demos etc on it. If working, your hard drive is fine.
The hard drive is in the 360 for alot of different reasons. Many uses of the hard drive include: * Downloading Xbox 360 and Xbox originals * Accessing music * Accessing videos * Saving data for games
an hard drive main purpose is to get files transfared from different areas of the computer
A hard drive caddy serves the purpose of protecting the hard drive in laptop computers. Each laptop model requires a different type of hard drive caddy, and it is important to get the right one so that it fits securely.
Hard drive.
a flash drive No, not a flash drive....he is talking about the hibernate functionality
To completely erase the data on the hard drive.
Microsoft Xbox was the first console to have a hard drive for saving games right out of the box. But I can trace game saving at least as far back as Mario Bros. 2. If there's any games to allow saving before that I don't know what it might be. Maybe Metroid.
saving user requests on its hard drive.
The hard drive on your xbox 360 is the optional storage device which stores all your saved game progression, music, pictures and games.
Unless something was saving to your hard drive prior to the RRoD, no. It only affects the 360's internal hardware.