Sometimes a System Restore operation has the unintended consequence of messing up a program you recently installed. The net effect is that a program may appear to be installed but is missing vital files that were “unhooked” by the System Restore operation. Because you probably ran System Restore to recover from a disaster, I don’t recommend undoing the System Restore. Instead, what you need to do is reinstall the program that’s screwing up. Doing so reconnects the items that System Restore disconnected.
The cheeky answer to the question of where cloud storage is located is, “In the sky.” Or, if you’re a nerd, you could answer, “On the
Internet.” Both answers are correct, but useless.
Cloud storage is best described as a hard drive located somewhere on the Internet. You can use a web page to access the storage, or the
storage can be available through a folder on your PC’s hard drive. As such, cloud storage doesn’t qualify as a device, like a hard drive or
media card. Beyond checking the Internet connection, cloud storage is mostly integrated into the
PC’s mass storage device and treated like other files and folders.
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