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2007-02-17 01:40:10 · 14 answers · asked by james c 1 in Computers & Internet Other - Computers

14 answers

Yes, on laptop or any other computer. They are great for backup, can be moved/used on another computer.

2007-02-17 01:50:39 · answer #1 · answered by Really ? 7 · 1 0

It is a great way to store you seldom used files. By not loading your primary hard down you can have a little better performance.
Also if you move between computer. Laptop to home, laptop to work, home to work,... It is much easier to transport just a externaal drive than an entire computer. You also have all you data backup in case the worst happens to your computer.

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If I were in your shoes I would purchase a Western Digital drive. They come with a 5 yr warranty, unlike most drive's 1 year.

2007-02-17 01:56:10 · answer #2 · answered by acklan 6 · 0 0

Since most laptops do not have more than 60-80 gigabytes of storage, it is very useful to have an external drive. Even though it is expensive, it is worth it. It is also easy to carry around

2007-02-17 01:46:55 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

The USB external drives are great for laptops.

2007-02-17 01:43:06 · answer #4 · answered by Vegan 7 · 1 1

Not as useful as if you knew how to divide your built in hard drive into several drives(partitions) like i do! My laptop has 180GB hard drive i thought i would need a new hard drive when my computer was slowing down even though only 80GB were taken out of the 180GB and i was always wondering why the computer was slowing down but when i went to the following website below i SERIOUSLY LEARNED IT ALL! I hope you don't think this is commercial this website has really good explanations. You can see it's website that's created on www.BLOGGER.com nothing but free content

2007-02-17 01:50:36 · answer #5 · answered by dabedatiludlisi 3 · 0 2

i use a external harddrive for music,videos and software backups, that way i dont use all the space on my computers, and its easy and portable from one to another. i use a 500gb, with about 300gb used.

but what i did, insead of buying a external, i bought a internel and put it in a external case, i found out you can get them cheaper that way, and thats all a external is anyways.

2007-02-17 01:47:43 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

yes, but only if you need the added disc space, most laptops produced today should have a hard drive that is large enough to not need it.

2007-02-17 01:44:16 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

this has got here about because you're utilising domicile windows XP in fat mode. you want to regulate both yopur pc and the externalcontinual to NTFS. I actually have done this lots and not in any respect had a mishap. domicile windows XP: Your pc needs to be NTFS to make certain the tremendous hdd, and to apply documents higher than 4 gig. in case you pc is Fat32, then it gained't see a huge exterior or internalcontinual at the same time as the documents in a folder on thatcontinual upload as a lot as more beneficial than 4gb. Thecontinual needs to be NTFS because once you initiate including documents to it, ultimately it is going to freeze. Fat32 to NTFS ------------------- you are able to substitute the report equipment without dropping the documents to study your hardcontinual, flashcontinual or exterior hardcontinual attempt this. all of them want to be NTFS to handle immediately's tremendous length report addressing.. Open my pc, actual click thecontinual >houses. in the pop up it is going to say fat or NTFS in the report equipment. If its fat you want to regulate it to NTFS to handle tremendous documents andcontinual sizes. Do it in this order: a million, Open my pc> actual click thecontinual >houses >approaches >examine now >tick both packing packing containers to sparkling the disk of any mistakes, then: 2. defrag thecontinual (approaches) 3. enter the convert command like this: say the usbcontinual is F: click initiate > Run > "convert F: /fs:ntfs /v /nosecurity /x" without the prices. similar on your Ccontinual. (paste above convert command and regulate thecontinual letter) I actually have done this lots and not in any respect lost any documents. do basically not interfere or take negative aspects. the most important probability is a potential failure at the same time as its doing it. It would not take lengthy. in case you discover it would not do the conversion, then run Chkdisk to fix mistakes then attempt again. you are able to study it in XP help documents. click initiate >help and help >type format in the quest – look in the overviews

2016-12-04 07:13:24 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

It would be useful for backups or extra storage space. It just depends on if you need those or not.

2007-02-17 01:44:33 · answer #9 · answered by Angry-T 5 · 1 0

I have one but I don't use it that much. If I backup, it's to DVD+R. But a flash drive really comes in handy.

2007-02-17 01:43:37 · answer #10 · answered by ⊂( ゚ ヮ゚)⊃ 4 · 0 1

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