Actually, contrary to popular belief, yes. It does. Information is stored on hard drives using electrons. Electrons have mass (and I'm assuming you're using this computer on planet Earth) which is being acted upon by the Earth's gravitational pull, therefore giving them weight. So, I'm sorry all of you out there who think that this is a ridiculously stupid question, but it's really not a dumb question and the answer is not no.
hard drive
Hard drive
The hard drive.
on the hard drive
How do you get a computer to boot up with no hard drive? What are the steps or what is the process of getting a hard drive installed into your computer if it is not bootable because of a missing hard drive.
hard drive
OS is stored bydefault in C: drive of Your computer
No. In modern computers, programs are not stored on a ROM chip, but on the hard drive.
Yes, the information in Microsoft Outlook is stored in hidden folders, usually on your computers C:\ drive.
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Hard drive
C is your computers actual hard drive. It is where the data is stored as well as your operating system.
You can't "increase" an hard drive. You can buy a new one. The best for you would be to talk with someone that has some experience with computers, because putting a new hard drive in a computer is not that hard but you can easily break something
No, it is all stored on the pen drive.
user profile
I assume the question relates to computers: therefore, files are usually stored in a folder saved in a directory on a hard drive.
No. It is stored on the Flash drive.