If you have a D drive on your computer, then you can save files onto it. You might do so to have your data files on a particular drive, rather than having them all on the C drive. Your C drive is usually used for storing the actual programs. So it can be useful to keep your data on a separate disk. It is a good organisational strategy. It can make it easier to see how much data you have, as you know that anything that is on the D drive are data files. If there is a crash on the C drive, you could still have all your files safe on the D drive. So there are lots of good reasons for doing it.
it depends on how you have the program configured to save to default. Usually default settings are set to save user data to the "C:" drive and into the user folders
If your main drive is your C drive then you shouldn't install any software on the D drive because it is a recovery drive. A recovery drive is where Windows creates backup files for System Recovery and stores the backup. If you absolutely NEED to install the software, here are the instructioins. 1.Run the installer. 2.Go to the part where it asks you where to install the program. 3.If it has a preset path(ie. C:\program files\ProgramName) change it to a directory in the D drive or the D drive it self(ie. D:\) 4. Install. If you followed through you SHOULD have the program in there. If any damage of any form happens, WikiAnswers.com and I are NOT responsible for it. I hope this helped and have a nice day :)
Windows
Your computer is set up to use drive C as a primary, assuming this is where the Windows folder is located. To save files on another hard drive, click on download and change the download destination, or you can save it to C then move it later.
The hard drive D: is usually the recovery drive for most Windows operating systems. It's best to stay away from that drive if it is.
D
With an external hard drive =D
Yes. Choose to save documents you're working on to the external drive, and they will not be saved on your internal drive. Be careful, though, Microsoft Office does cache files locally, in case of a power failure or crash to save your progress, and these may possibly be recovered from an internal drive. Your external drive should be given a drive letter, D:, E:, F:, etc.
in C or D Disk make a folder name cs 1.6 and during installation on your cs 1.6 select that folder. Do not save in program files during installation
First, they would not be on the "D" drive. The "D" drive is a small partition created when Windows is installed and only contains the basic information of Windows. Files that are :deleted, aren't really deleted until at sometime the area that they take up on the hard drive are written over. There is some software out there, Active UNDelete is one, that can help recover files that nave been deleted IF they are still intact on the hard drive.
Make the file by opening minecraft, click singleplayer, then click new file. Then navigate to .minecraft (click start, run, and type in %appdata%) Then click saves. Find your file and put it in your USB drive. And thats how! :D