What are the Windows G: through Z: drives used for?
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Tom Wijsman
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Published on 2012-04-01T07:01:55Z
Indexed on
2012/04/09
5:36 UTC
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In Windows you have a C:
drive. The first things labeled beyond that seems to be extra stuff. So my DVD drive is D:
and if you put in a USB stick it becomes F:
. And then some people also have A:
and B:
. But then, what and where are G:
through Z:
drives for?
Is it possible to connect so many things to a computer to make them all in use? Or more than them?
Would it give a BSOD? Or would this slow down the system somehow? Or what would happen?
What if I want to connect even more drives to the computer? Because with the hard drive limits it's more efficient to buy more drives than to buy a single drive with a lot of capacity.
Is it possible to create drive letters like
0:
throughZ:
orAA:
throughZZ:
?
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