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Because looking for a drive letter is so much easier.
So from your computer's standpoint, you're just looking at a drive letter.
For example, one of the most useful is to include not only the drive letter, but the current directory.
And it's just a cool solution because basically you see a drive letter.
Drive letters are not the only way of accessing different volumes.
The program assigns a drive letter to that region of the disk.
Some, like the use of drive letters and backslashes, are quite superficial.
The mounted volume could still have its own drive letter assigned separately.
Using an additional (temporary) drive letter will circumvent this problem.
When all files were transferred, the drive letters would be swapped.
Then it creates another drive letter for what's encrypted and protected on the inside.
So you get a second drive letter, and that's your inner sanctum contents.
All volume based devices show up under My Computer with a drive letter.
For the common network drive letter, see file server.
Certain types of devices do not appear as drive letters in "My Computer".
So it may not be that today it's looking around at other drive letters, other places to squirrel away its data.
"M" represents the drive letter to assign a custom label to.
And then you assign that a drive letter.
Topmost was a cancer drive letter from an organization he'd contributed to after Daisy had died.
So what you see is a drive letter in Windows into which you can store anything you want.
That area is assigned a drive letter, and files saved or moved there are encrypted automatically.
You enter that, and then it creates - you will already have a drive letter for sort of the outside container.
And I find that's just as convenient as having it as a drive letter.
Each logon session receives its own set of drive letters.
Specifies the drive letter (followed by a colon), mount point, or volume name.