-
Erasure I Say I Say I Say Zip카테고리 없음 2020. 2. 26. 13:58
Audio: Read by the author.I cannot say I did not ask to be born. I asked with my mother’s beauty, and her money. I asked with my father’s desire for his orgasms and for my mother’s money.
I asked with the cradle my sister had grown out of. I asked with my mother’s longing for a son, I asked with patriarchy.
I asked with the milk that would well in her breasts, needing to be drained by a little, living pump. I asked with my sister’s hand-me-downs, lying folded. I asked with geometry, with origami, with swimming, with sewing, with what my mind would thirst to learn. Before I existed, I asked, with the love of my children, to exist, and with the love of their children. Did I ask with my tiny flat lungs for a long portion of breaths?
Did I ask with the space in the ground, like a portion of breath, where my body will rest, when it is motionless, when its elements move back into the earth? I asked, with everything I did not have, to be born. And nowhere in any of it was there meaning, there was only the asking for being, and then the being, the turn taken.
I want to say that love is the meaning, but I think that love may be the means, what we ask with. Published in the print edition of the, issue.
To start with, your flash drive isn’t empty when you buy it. When it’s new in the box, there are three hidden folders on it. The three folders are: “.fseventsd”, “.Spotlight-V100” and “.Trashes”. These folders are part of the initial formatting of the drive. There are four different types of formatting:1. ExFATAll standard flash drives, smaller than 32GB, are formatted as FAT and FAT32.
These three folders help the computer communicate with the flash drive. The “.fseventsd” and “.Spotlight-V100” folders contain meta data that helps with the indexing of the files on the flash drive. The “.Trashes” folder is what we are here to talk about.RELATED:Just like a normal hard disk drive, when you delete a file on a flash drive it isn’t automatically deleted out of the flash storage. On a hard disk drive, when files are deleted they go to a waiting area from which they can be retrieved. When you empty the recycle bin or trash, it will delete the data from the drive to be written over later.It’s the same way with a flash drive. When you delete something from the flash drive, it goes to the “.Trashes” folder to sit there until it is permanently deleted.
They aren’t completely deleted initially, just in case the user deleted them by mistake.So, if your flash drive is full of data and you delete most of it, it will still be on there in the “.Trashes” folder. No space will have been recovered. If you access that folder, you can restore your files but you can't delete them. They have already been trashed and can’t be trashed again.The only way to free up space on your flash drive is to empty the recycling bin or trash on the host computer. When the host computer empties its files it will also empty the files on the USB drive. Normally to view these semi-deleted files, you’d have to change your system settings to view invisible folders.
Erasure I Say I Say I Say Zip Code
Erasure I Say I Say I Say Zip Line
However, it just so happens that when you delete files and they show up in the “.Trashes” directory, it will also show up in your trash bin.Therefore, you can view and restore items from your flash drive in your computer’s trash bin — if the files haven’t been permanently wiped. If your computer has files in the trash bin, it may be hard to distinguish them from the files on the flash drive. To view only flash drive trash files you must empty your bin before you plug in your flash drive.RELATED:Even if you permanently delete the files on the flash drive, it will have fragmented data left on it. The only real way to get everything off and have all of the space restored is to reformat the disk. Reformat sounds like a big complex change, but it’s quite simple.If you are on a Windows computer, navigate to “Computer,” the place where your hard drive and all other removable drives are listed. Select the flash drive you want to reformat and right click. The “Format” option should be in the third set of available options.A window should open with the drive size, name, formatting type and options to reformat.
Select one of the options (probably FAT) and click start to begin reformatting the disk. A warning will appear to make sure you are aware of the changes that will occur.On a Mac computer, open “Disk Utility.” Your flash drive should be listed to the left. On the right, choose the second button called “Erase.” Choose the way you want it formatted and name it whatever you want. Then click erase.
I know some space is used up by default.I transferred quite a lot of music no problem, then erased. Then tried to put on some photos.'
Not enough space'. I erased,erased free space,tried everything. I even emptied computer trash.Then tried to drag some photos only 64MB but said 'not enough space' on a 16GB stick?!.THEN.tried just 9 photos20MB and BINGO.All of a sudden, thousands of whatsibytes transferring, would take 35 minutes to copy 6.4GB all my house renovation photos over 4 years!!
I am using a Macbook for stuff to go into Photos on iMac as old discs won't open to transfer. What is going on!!??What is going on?.