Most flash drives only fit one way, so don’t force the flash drive; if it won’t fit, rotate it 180 degrees and try again.

You may have to scroll down on the left-hand column of options in order to find This PC.

The flash drive usually has the “(F:)” drive letter assigned to it.

You can also select every file in the flash drive by pressing Ctrl+A.

If you’re comfortable with Windows’ click-and-drag feature, you can instead click and drag the selected files onto your desktop or into your preferred folder. If you do this, skip to the last step in this method.

You can also create a new folder by selecting a destination folder, clicking Make New Folder, and entering a name for the folder.

Most flash drives only fit one way, so don’t force the flash drive; if it won’t fit, rotate it 180 degrees and try again. If your Mac has a set of oval ports instead of a traditional rectangular USB port, you’ll need to buy a USB 3. 0 to USB-C (or Thunderbolt 3) adapter in order to plug your flash drive into it. Disregard this step if you have a USB-C flash drive.

You can also press ⌘ Command+A to select every file in the flash drive.

If you’re comfortable with your Mac’s drag-and-drop feature, you can instead click and drag the selected files onto your Mac’s desktop or into your preferred folder. If you do this, skip to the last step in this method.

If you’re copying one file, you’ll see the file’s name after Copy (for example, if you’re copying a file named “New”, you’d click Copy “New” here). If you’re copying multiple files, you’ll click Copy [number] Items (e. g. , Copy 4 Items) here instead.

If you’re copying one file, you’ll see the file’s name after Copy (for example, if you’re copying a file named “New”, you’d click Copy “New” here). If you’re copying multiple files, you’ll click Copy [number] Items (e. g. , Copy 4 Items) here instead.

If you want to move the files onto the desktop, for example, you’d go back to the desktop.