Tuesday, August 1, 2017

Add Attachments in Gmail


How to Add Attachments in Gmail for Android


If you don’t use email as part of your day to day life, it can easily be one of those things that seems more complicated than it is. But there’s no need to break out the computer if you simply need to email something—a picture, document, something—because you can easily do it directly from your phone.
Now, to those who do this often, it’s a simple task. But for someone who has never needed to attach something to an email from their phone, it can be a bit unintuitive. In fact, I’ve had to explain this very thing recently to a couple of people close to me.

First Things First: Save Your File

Honestly, attaching the file is only half the battle, especially if it’s something you need to save from another source first. For example, maybe it’s a bank statement, image, or similar file that you need to download from the internet, or another person’s message.
Thus, the first thing you’ll need to do is grab the file for download. Most of the time, this is as simple as tapping on a “download” button, but if it’s a picture you’re trying to save, you’ll need to long-press it and choose “Download image.”
Similarly, if you’re trying to save the file from some sort of cloud storage, like Dropbox or Google Drive, you’ll need to first save the file onto your device. This can usually be done by pressing the three-dot overflow menu button and choosing “Download” (or similar).
There are so many different scenarios for this situation, it’s hard to give exact details for each one, but the point remains the same: you’ll need to have the file stored on your phone.

Next: Pen the Email and Attach the File

With the file in hand, you’re ready to attach that bad boy. Go ahead and fire up Gmail and open a new email by tapping the pencil icon in the bottom corner. Unless, of course, you’re trying to add the attachment to a reply, in which case you’ll simply tap the “reply” button.
From there, go ahead and fill out all the important details: to, subject, and compose.
Once you’ve said all you need to say, tap the little paper clip icon in the top right corner. A new menu will open, offering a few options: Attach a file, Insert from Drive, Send money, and Request money. Tap the first option.
 
Once you find the file and tap on it, it’ll automatically be attached—that’s literally all there is to it.
Once you’ve confirmed that’s the correct file and all the details are good, send away!

See Who Logged Into a Computer


How to See Who Logged Into a Computer (and When)


Have you ever wanted to monitor who’s logging into your computer and when? On Professional editions of Windows, you can enable logon auditing to have Windows track which user accounts log in and when.
The Audit logon events setting tracks both local logins and network logins. Each logon event specifies the user account that logged on and the time the login took place. You can also see when users logged off.
Note: Logon auditing only works on the Professional edition of Windows, so you can’t use this if you have a Home edition. This should work on Windows 7, 8, and Windows 10. We’re going to cover Windows 10 in this article. The screens might look a little different in other versions, but the process is pretty much the same.

Enable Logon Auditing

To enable logon auditing, you’re going to use the Local Group Policy Editor. It’s a pretty powerful tool, so if you’ve never used it before, it’s worth taking some time to learn what it can do. Also, if you’re on a company network, do everyone a favor and check with your admin first. If your work computer is part of a domain, it’s also likely that it’s part of a domain group policy that will supersede the local group policy, anyway.
To open the Local Group Policy Editor, hit Start, type “gpedit.msc, and then select the resulting entry.
In the Local Group Policy Editor, in the left-hand pane, drill down to Local Computer Policy > Computer Configuration > Windows Settings > Security Settings > Local Policies > Audit Policy. In the right-hand pane, double-click the “Audit logon events” setting.
In the properties window that opens, enable the “Success” option to have Windows log successful logon attempts. Enable the “Failure” option if you also want Windows to log failed logon attempts. Click the “OK” button when you’re done.
You can now close the Local Group Policy Editor window.

View Logon Events

After you enable logon auditing, Windows records those logon events—along with a username and timestamp—to the Security log. You can view these events using Event Viewer.
Hit Start, type “event,” and then click the “Event Viewer” result.
In the “Event Viewer” window, in the left-hand pane, navigate to the Windows Logs > Security.
In the middle pane, you’ll likely see a number of “Audit Success” events. Windows logs separate details for things like when an account someone signs on with is successfully granted its privileges. You’re looking for events with the event ID 4624—these represent successful login events. You can see details about a selected event in the bottom part of that middle-pane, but you can also double-click an event see its details in their own window.
And if you scroll down just a bit on the details, you can see information you’re after—like the user account name.
And because this is just another event in the Windows event log with a specific event ID, you can also use the Task Scheduler to take action when a logon occurs. You can even have Windows email you when someone logs on.

Movie Preview - Kidnap

Properly Thread Tweets


How to Properly Thread Tweets for Your Tweetstorms


Twitter threads (aka tweetstorms) might be widely hated, but they are a big part of the Twitter experience. Since you’re most likely going to do them, you might as well do them right. Here’s how.

What Is a Tweetstorm?

A Tweetstorm is when someone tries to get around Twitter’s 140 character limited the easy way: by Tweeting more than once in quick succession. People often number their Tweets so that a total non sequitur appearing on their followers’ Timelines isn’t too alarming.


There is a right and a wrong way to do this, though. It’s best to use Twitter’s threaded replies so that everything stays in a logical order. That way, someone can Retweet the first Tweet, and anyone who clicks into it will be able to view the whole thing in one go. If you just tweet lots of things in quick succession, people won’t be able to easily see the statements that came before or after a given tweet.

So the @howtogeek staff are currently debating what Twitter threads are good so @jhpot can feature one in an article.

Click on the Tweet above and you’ll see a thread done properly.

How to Create a Threaded Tweetstorm

If you’re going to do a Tweetstorm, here’s how to use threaded replies so things don’t get messy. All you have to do is reply to your previous Tweet for each subsequent tweet you write. Not the first Tweet, but the previous one.
Here, I’m going to add another Tweet to my existing thread. If you want to do the same, click reply.
And then enter what you want your new Tweet to say.
Post it, and it will appear at the end of the thread.
Job done! If I wanted to continue it, I’d just reply to the most recent tweet (“But seriously, Kesha?”) to keep it going in sequential order.

There’s a lot more that goes into creating a non-annoying Tweetstorm but threading your Tweets is a good start.

Todays HaHa



Trivia

The Composition Of The Iconic “Bliss” Windows XP Wallpaper Was Only Possible Because Of?


An Insect Infestation                                       Recent Forest Fires

Seasonal Flooding                                           Summer Storms




















Answer: An Insect Infestation
It was the default wallpaper on Windows XP. Between the hundreds of millions of computers Windows XP was installed on and the sheer number of years it hung in there, it’s a safe estimate to say that the image in question has been seen, at minimum, billions of times since 2001.
What’s fascinating about the image, its enduring popularity aside, is the story of how it came into existence, and how without a series of entirely unrelated events, it wouldn’t be the iconic wallpaper it became. The image was taken in January of 1996 by retired National Geographic photographer Charles O’Rear. He was en route from his California home to visit his then-girlfriend (now wife) Daphne Irwin. O’Rear was working with Irwin on a book about the wine country of California, and he kept his camera with him in case he came across any ideal shooting conditions. On the particular day he snapped the photo that would become “Bliss”, he was driving along the Sonoma Highway (California State Route 12 and 121) in the heart of wine country, but there was nothing wine-related for him to shoot. The vineyards had all been laid bare by an infestation of the pest phylloxera, and vineyard owners had ripped up all the grape vines to purge the rest (replacing the vines with grass to keep the soil nourished and in place).
The combination of the bright blue sky, puffy clouds, and rolling emerald hills was irresistible and, useful for the book or not, he pulled over and composed the photo (taking a total of four shots). He later uploaded the best shot to the Corbis stock photo service and scarcely thought anything of it again. That is until Microsoft contacted him and offered to purchase the total rights to the photograph (including the original negatives) in exchange for an unspecified but exorbitant sum of money. Why Corbis and why that photo? Bill Gates founded and owns the stock photography service and it is widely believed that they pulled it from the service to promote it. As for why “Bliss”, the photo is a perfectly complimentary and serene companion to the Windows XP default color scheme.
So if not for a trip to see his girlfriend, a medium format camera on hand to document anything interesting he found in wine country, a perfectly beautiful day, a pest infestation, uploading the shot to a stock photo service owned by Bill Gates, and a willingness to sell off the rights to his photo, that one lovely rolling hill in Sonoma County, California wouldn’t be immortalized in our collective consciousness.

Did You Know

Did You Know?

All of the chainmail seen in the Lord of the Rings trilogy was hand crafted by two people, Christopher Smith and Carl Payne. The duo spent two years crafting the suits and, in the process, linked around five million rings composed of a collective ten kilometers of wire.

Today's Tech Term 

Blank-Off Plate

Blank-Off Plates (a.k.a. Face Plates and Filler Plates) are the small metal plates found on the backs (and sometimes front) of computer cases that serve as coverings for the openings of unoccupied hardware expansion slots.

Entertainment News

Tuesday's TV highlights: Marilyn Monroe on Turner Classic Movies and more


Marilyn Monroe is remembered with a day-long slate of films including "The Seven Year Itch" on Turner Classic Movies. (20th Century Fox)

By Matt Cooper

SERIES

America’s Got Talent Laverne Cox (“Orange Is the New Black”) serves as a guest judge on the reality series. 8 p.m. NBC

Rare — Creatures of the Photo Ark Nature photographer Joel Sartore visits New Zealand, Budapest, Hungary, and Prague, Czech Republic, in his quest to photograph elusive and endangered species in the final installment of this three-part series. 9 p.m. KOCE

Manhunt: Unabomber “A Beautiful Mind’s” Paul Bettany portrays Ted Kaczynski — a.k.a. the “Unabomber” — and “Avatar’s” Sam Worthing plays the real-life FBI profiler tasked with taking him down in this new eight-part docu-series. 9 p.m. Discovery Channel, Investigation Discovery

Bizarre Foods With Andrew Zimmern Your host treks along the Daniel Boone Wilderness Trail sampling traditional Appalachian eats in this new episode. 9 p.m. Travel Channel

World of Dance The competition heats up as the top two acts in each division battle for a spot in next week’s final. With judges Jennifer Lopez, Derek Hough and Ne-Yo and host/mentor Jenna Dewan Tatum. 10 p.m. NBC

Adam Ruins Everything Host Adam Conover looks into online-dating sites in this new episode. 10 p.m. truTV

SPECIALS

CNN Town Hall Former Vice President Al Gore (“An Inconvenient Sequel: Truth to Power”) takes part in a global forum on climate change. CNN’s Anderson Cooper is the moderator. 6 and 9 p.m. CNN

MOVIES

The Seven Year Itch Turner Classic Movies’ day-long salute to Marilyn Monroe includes this sexy 1955 romp directed by Billy Wilder and costarring Tom Ewell. 5 p.m. TCM

TALK SHOWS

CBS This Morning Author and entrepreneur Tyler Gage; John Boyega (“Detroit”). (N) 7 a.m. KCBS

Today Sneakers; Today Food; marijuana moms; Toni Collette and Molly Shannon (“Fun Mom Dinner”); Julia Michaels performs. (N) 7 a.m. KNBC

KTLA Morning News (N) 7 a.m. KTLA

Good Morning America Idris Elba; Raven-Symoné; the cast of “Step” performs. (N) 7 a.m. KABC

Good Day LA DJ Stephen “tWitch” Boss; chef Gordon Ramsay. (N) 7 a.m. KTTV

Live With Kelly and Ryan Idris Elba; Elizabeth Olsen; style expert Lawrence Zarian; guest co-host Carrie Ann Inaba. (N) 9 a.m. KABC

The View John Boyega; Raven-Symoné. (N) 10 a.m. KABC

Rachael Ray A hair gadget is supposed to give instant curls; the right bra; a five-ingredient chicken dinner. 10 a.m. KCAL

The Wendy Williams Show 11 a.m. KTTV

The Talk Jenna Dewan Tatum; Meagan Good; Kevin Frazier. (N) 1 p.m. KCBS

The Dr. Oz Show Corey Feldman. 1 p.m. KTTV

The Real RuPaul. 1 p.m. KCOP

The Doctors Prostate exams. 2 p.m. KCBS

Steve Harvey Ne-Yo; Larenz Tate. 2 p.m. KNBC

Harry Archie Panjabi. 2 p.m. KTTV

Dr. Phil Teen girl leaves home. 3 p.m. KCBS

The Ellen DeGeneres Show Diane Keaton; illusionist David Blaine. 3 p.m. KNBC

The Real Bryshere “Yazz” Gray (“Empire”); Loni Love. 3 p.m. KTTV

The Wendy Williams Show Priyanka Chopra. 3 p.m. KCOP

Tavis Smiley Rapper and activist Killer Mike. 11 p.m. KOCE

Charlie Rose (N) 11 p.m. KVCR, 11:30 p.m. KOCE, 1 a.m. KLCS

The Daily Show With Trevor Noah Former Vice President Al Gore. (N) 11 p.m. Comedy Central

Conan Holly Hunter; Natasha Lyonne. 11 p.m. TBS

The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon Jeremy Renner; Bridget Everett (“Fun Mom Dinner”); French Montana and Swae Lee perform. (N) 11:34 p.m. KNBC

The Late Show With Stephen Colbert Sen. Al Franken (D-Minn.); Adam Conover (“Adam Ruins Everything”); Randy Newman performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KCBS

Jimmy Kimmel Live Kate Beckinsale; Reddit’s Alexis Ohanian; Justin Moore performs. (N) 11:35 p.m. KABC

The Late Late Show With James Corden Gordon Ramsay; Brendan Gleeson; Maggie Rogers performs. (N) 12:37 a.m. KCBS

Late Night With Seth Meyers Idris Elba; Alexis Bledel; chef Michael Voltaggio. (N) 12:37 a.m. KNBC

Nightline (N) 12:37 a.m. KABC

Last Call With Carson Daly Elisabeth Moss; Tiger Army performs; Lauren Ash. 1:38 a.m. KNBC

Worthy of Trust

Worthy of Trust

By Touching Lives 
“’God is faithful, by whom you were called into the fellowship of His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.” 1 Corinthians 1:9
“But you promised!”
How many times as parents have we heard those words? And let’s face it…kids’ memories tend to be much sharper than ours when it comes to what we say. They can be deeply disappointed if we forget, change our mind, or just have something come up that keeps us from doing what “we promised” to do. The truth is that all children need to know they can trust the adults closest to them to do what they say they will. This is why kids crave promise keeping.
Isn’t it wonderful that God never forgets what He said? He keeps His promises all of the time. He never changes His mind, mis-speaks, or carelessly gives His Word. If He says He will do it, He will. Period. This is why we say that God is faithful. That word, faithful, means “worthy of trust.” God has proven Himself to be worthy of our trust.
God’s faithfulness is foundational to our faith as Christians. In his letter to the believers in Corinth, the Apostle Paul wrote, “God is faithful, by whom you were called into the fellowship of His Son, Jesus Christ our Lord.” He identifies God as the One who called us into a relationship with Jesus Christ. Paul is reminding God’s people that if they could trust God’s faithfulness in salvation, they can trust His faithfulness in everything else. As believers we know God keeps His Word because He has kept it in saving us. What other proof could we need?
We, like children, crave promise keeping. Often times we seek to satisfy this craving through relationships with people, or by believing the subtle promises that Satan whispers in our ear. The truth, however, is that God is the only One who is always faithful. Even the best people make mistakes. And the smooth-talking tongue of Satan surely cannot be trusted. But God can – all of the time and in every situation. He has proven that to us in His Son, Jesus.

Steps to Building a Life of Love

5 First Steps to Building a Life of Love 

Five First Steps to Building a Life of Love
By Rick Warren
“Keep company with him and learn a life of love. Observe how Christ loved us. His love was not cautious but extravagant. He didn’t love in order to get something from us but to give everything of himself to us. Love like that” (Ephesians 5:2 The Message).
I’ve been on this earth for a while now, and I’m still convicted by God about how little I really know about love and how often I am an unloving person. But the fact is, we all need work in this area. We all have a lot of growing to do as we mature in God’s love.
So how do you build a life of real deep love? That’s a profound question, and you will spend the rest of your life trying to do it. But I can give you some steps to get you out of the starting block — five things you can do this week that will help you get on the road to becoming a truly great person of love.
1. Learn how mature love acts and responds.
Personal change always begins with a change in perspective. You need to get God’s perspective on what love is really like, because the world knows nothing about real, deep love. You do that by getting into God’s Word.
2. Start your day with a daily reminder to love.
The first 10 minutes of the day set your entire mood for the rest of the day. Resolve to get up in the morning and say, “God, help me to remember that the most important thing is loving you and loving other people. If I don’t get anything else done today besides love you and the people that you put around me more, this has not been a wasted day.”
3. Memorize what God says about love.
God’s Word is filled with truths and principles on how to become a loving person. The problem is, when you’re in a situation where you’re tempted to be unloving, your Bible is usually at home on a shelf. That’s why you need to memorize Scripture — so that God can bring verses to mind when you need them the most.
4. Practice acting in unselfish, loving ways.
Love is like a muscle. The more you use it, the more it develops. If you want to become a truly loving person, you have to intentionally do some things that seem awkward at first. But the more you practice, the more it becomes second nature, and you become a genuinely loving person.
5. Get support from other loving people.
If you’re just sitting in your room and reading a book, you’re not going to get very far in learning how to love. You only learn it in connection to others, in the context of community. That’s one of the reasons why a small group is so important! It puts you in situations where you can grow as you see godly love modeled for you and as you practice serving others in unselfish, loving ways.
You never learn to love by just sitting back and listening. You learn it in relationship to other people.

Nothing Matters Without Love

Nothing Matters Without Love

Nothing Matters Without Love
By Rick Warren
“If you are a follower of Christ Jesus . . . all that matters is your faith that makes you love others” (Galatians 5:6 CEV).
Have you ever wondered what matters to God? The Bible tells us in Galatians 5:6“If you are a follower of Christ Jesus . . . all that matters is your faith that makes you love others” (CEV).God says what matters in life is not your accomplishments or your achievements or your fame or your wealth. The other thing that matters is having a faith that causes you to love other people. If you miss that, you have missed the most important thing in life.
Over the next couple of days, we’re going to look at the most famous chapter in the Bible on love, 1 Corinthians 13. When speakers want to get your attention and want you to remember something, they use repetition. They say something over and over. In the first few verses of this passage, Paul says the same thing five different ways: The most important thing in life is love.
Here are the first four reasons why.
1. If you don’t live a life of love, then nothing you say will matter.
“If I could speak all the languages of earth and of angels, but didn’t love others, I would only be a noisy gong or a clanging cymbal” (1 Corinthians 13:1 NLT).
We’re really impressed by great speakers. We love eloquence and charisma. But God says, “I don’t care how good of a communicator you are. Are you living a life of love?” If you’re not, then nothing you say will matter. Words without love are just noise.
2. If you don't live a life of love, nothing you know will matter.
“I may have the gift of prophecy. I may understand all the secret things of God and have all knowledge . . . But even with all these things, if I do not have love, then I am nothing” (1 Corinthians 13:2 NCV).
We live in a world where knowledge is exploding. We are smarter than we’ve ever been. But we still have the same problems: crime, abuse, prejudice, violence. Why? Because the world doesn’t need more knowledge. It needs more love. You may be a genius. But God says if you don’t have love in your life, all that you know is worthless.
3. If you don’t live a life of love, nothing you believe will matter.
The Bible says, “Even if I had the gift of faith so that I could speak to a mountain and make it move, I would still be worth nothing at all without love” (1 Corinthians 13:2b TLB). There’s a myth that being a follower of Christ is just a matter of believing certain truths. Nothing can be further from the truth! Following Christ is about living a life of love. It takes more than belief to please God.
4. If you don’t live a life of love, nothing you give will matter.
The next verse says, “If I gave everything I have to the poor and even sacrificed my body, I could boast about it; but if I didn’t love others, I would have gained nothing” (1 Corinthians 13:3 NLT).
Love isn’t always the motivation for giving. Some people give just to get back or out of guilt or for control or prestige. You can give for a lot of wrong motives, but the Bible says if you’re not doing it out of love, none of your giving counts.
The Bible is very clear about what happens when you don’t live a life of love. Tomorrow we’ll look at the last reason why you need to focus on your faith that makes you love others.

Tues Inspiration

Morning Inspiration with James Merritt

Spending time with God means doing family devotions together. Believe it or not, it is not complicated and it doesn't have to (and shouldn't be) very long at all. You can do everything from taking a Bible story to one single verse, take a few minutes to teach the central lesson about that verse and then have each family member pray or even have one family member pray. The point is one of the ways we love God is by taking our clock and carving out time for Him where He gets our complete focus, our complete attention, and are on unreserved affection.

Monday, July 31, 2017

Manage Partitions w/out Other Software


How to Manage Partitions on Windows Without Downloading Any Other Software


There are tons of third-party partition managers for Windows, but did you know that Windows includes its own? Microsoft did a good job of hiding the Disk Management tool, but it’s there.
You can use the Disk Management tool to resize, create, delete and format partitions and volumes, as well as change their drive letters—all without downloading or paying for any other software.

Accessing Disk Management

The quickest way to launch the Disk Management tool is by hitting Start, typing “partition” into the search box, and then clicking the “Create and format hard disk partitions” option that comes up.
The “Disk Management” window is divided into two panes. The top pane shows you a list of your volumes. The bottom pane shows a graphical representation of your disks and the volumes that exist on each disk. If you select a volume in the top pane, the bottom pane jumps to show the disk that contains that volume. And if you select a disk or volume in the bottom pane, the top pane jumps to show the corresponding volume there, too.
Note: Technically speaking, volumes and partitions are a little different. A partition is space that’s set aside on a disk separate from the other space on that disk. A volume is a partition that’s been formatted with a file system. For the most part, we’re going to be talking about volumes in this article, though we may mention partitions or unallocated space where those terms are appropriate.

How to Resize a Volume

Occasionally, you may need to resize a volume. For example, you may need have a disk with one big volume and then decide you want to make it into two separate volumes. You can do that by shrinking the existing volume and then using the freed-up space to create a new volume. Or maybe your disk used to be divided into two volumes, but you deleted one of them. You could then extend the existing volume into that newly freed-up space to make one big volume.

Shrink a Volume

Right-click a volume in either pane and select the “Shrink Volume” option.
You can only shrink a volume if it has enough free space. For example, say you have a 1 TB disk that contains a single volume, but you don’t have anything stored on it yet. You could shrink the volume by up to nearly the full 1 TB.
In the example below, we’re shrinking an empty (no data stored on it) 1 TB volume by about 500 GB. Notice that the window shows the total size of the current volume, and the available space you have for shrinking (which in the case of our empty volume is close the total size). The only option you have is how much you want to shrink the volume by—in other words the amount of unallocated space that will be left over after the shrinking. The window also shows the total new size of the current volume after you shrink it by however much you select.
And now that we’ve shrunk the volume, you can see that the disk contains our shrunken volume on the left and the new unallocated space we freed up on the right.

Extend a Volume

You can only extend a volume if it has unallocated space to the right of it on the same disk. Windows can’t extend a basic partition to its left—you’ll need third-party software for that.
To extend a volume, right-click the existing volume (which has unallocated space to its right), and then click “Extend Volume.”
In the “Extend Volume Wizard” window, click “Next.”
The “Select Disks” screen will already have the appropriate disk selected. It also shows the total volume size and the maximum available space you have to extend the volume. Just select the space you want to use and then click the “Next” button. Here, we’re extending our volume to use all of the available unallocated space.
And finally, click the “Finish” button to have Windows extend the volume.

Create a New Volume

If you’ve shrunk a partition—or have unallocated space on a disk for whatever reason—you can use the free space to create an additional volume. Just right-click inside the unallocated space and select the “New Simple Volume” option.
In the “New Simple Volume Wizard” window, click “Next” to get started.
Specify the size of the volume you want to create and then click the “Next” button. Here, we’re creating a new volume that uses all the available unallocated space on the disk.
Assign a drive letter (or accept the default assignation) and then click the “Next” button.
You can choose whether or not to go ahead and format the partition, but you will need to format it at some point before you can use. The only real reason you might want to not format it right away is if you need to let another tool do the formatting.
An example of this would be if you were planning to install a new operating system in the new volume so that you could dual-boot your PC into different operating systems. In that case, you might want to let the new operating system format the drive during its installation.
Otherwise, go ahead and format the disk, pick a file system to use, and assign a volume label. Click “Next” when you’re ready.
And then click the “Finish” button to have Windows get started creating the volume and—if you chose to—formatting it.
When it’s done, you’ll see your new partition listed in the Disk Management tool and you should see it if you pop open File Explorer, as well.

How to Delete a Volume

Sometimes, you might need to delete an existing volume. One good reason for this is if you no longer use the volume. By deleting it, you return that space to the unallocated pool and then you could use it to extend an existing volume. Fair warning: deleting a volume also deletes all of the data on that volume, so make sure it’s empty or backed up before you proceed.
Right-click the volume in either pane of the “Disk Management” window, and then select the “Delete Volume” option.
In the warning window that pops up, click the “Yes” button.
The volume you deleted becomes unallocated space, which you can then use however you like.

How to Change a Volume’s Drive Letter

If you’ve ever wanted to rearrange the drive letters for your various volumes, the Disk Management tool is the place to go. Maybe you just want all your main hard drives grouped together or maybe you want to use a specific letter for a certain drive.
Right-click any volume and select the “Change Drive Letter and Paths” option.
In the “Change Drive Letter and Paths” window, click the “Change” button.
In the dropdown to the right of the “Assign the following drive letter” option, select a new drive letter. Note that only letters not already assigned to volumes are available on the dropdown. If you’re rearranging several drive letters, you may have to change some others first to make their letters available. When you’ve selected a letter, click the “OK” button.
A warning message lets you know that some apps might rely on drive letters and won’t run correctly if you change the letter. Typically, this applies only to much older apps, so you should be safe going ahead and clicking the “Yes” button. If you do run into trouble, you can change the drive letter back.

How to Erase or Format a Volume

You can also use Disk Management to format a volume. Using Disk Management to do this provides all the same options as the regular format tool you access through File Explorer, so whichever you want to use is up to you. You can format a volume whether the volume has already been formatted or not. Just be aware that you’ll lose all the data when you format a volume.
Right-click a volume and choose the “Format” option.
In the “Format” window, type a volume label, specify a file system, and choose whether you want to perform a quick format or not. When you’re ready, click the “OK” button.
You’re warned that formatting will erase all the data on the volume, so if you’re sure, go ahead and click the “OK” button.
Formatting can take anywhere from a few seconds to a minute or so, depending on the size of the volume. When it’s done, you’ll be ready to put the volume to use.

The Disk Management tool isn’t as flashy as some third-party tools—in fact, it still looks like something from Windows 2000—but it gets the job done. Third-party partition managers do sometimes include more advanced features—like creating bootable disks, recovering information from damaged volumes, and the ability to extend volumes into unallocated space to the left of the volume. So, if you need any of those features, it might be worth taking a look around. Popular choices include EaseUS and GParted.