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| Thread ID: 53346 | 2005-01-14 21:24:00 | partitioning | jackyht2002 (6606) | Press F1 |
| Post ID | Timestamp | Content | User | ||
| 314108 | 2005-01-14 21:24:00 | Hi All :help: About those big brand laptop and Computers, they only have 1 partitioning on their HDD... I have got one of the Packard Bell laptop, i really want to make a partition so that i can store my docs on the other drive instead of the C Drive... My Questions for you guys are :confused: , (1) Can I do the partition using that Disc Mgmt to make a partition and do i need to re-format the whole computer? and secondly, you know those big brand computer, they have a recovery CD, so if i make the partition, would this recovery disc ever work again because the content of the machine has been changed compared with the CD.. thanks for your help Jacky |
jackyht2002 (6606) | ||
| 314109 | 2005-01-15 02:46:00 | Disk Management should be able to split the disk and make a new partition. I don't use XP (which I assume you have) but I'm sure the disk should be defragmented before trying to do this, for obvious reasons. :D The recovery disk might be nasty and really "make the computer as it was when you got it". One old Compaq laptop I own has that. It formats the disk and reloads W98. But more modern systems might be smarter, and leave the partitioning alone; just formatting the C: partition, then reinstalling the OS. It should even have a "repair" option which is even less drastic. Of course you will have backups of your data partition, won't you? :D All you XPerts, where have you been all day? |
Graham L (2) | ||
| 314110 | 2005-01-15 03:40:00 | (1) Can I do the partition using that Disc Mgmt to make a partition and do i need to re-format the whole computer? Yes, Disk Manager can be used to repartition or create partitions on a hard drive . Resizing is not an option unless the drive is converted to dynamic and since neither 2000 nor XP will install onto a dynamic drive, the point is moot . No - computers are not formatted, only partitions and logical drives on a hard drive are . and secondly, you know those big brand computer, they have a recovery CD, so if i make the partition, would this recovery disc ever work again because the content of the machine has been changed compared with the CD . . Yes, the recovery CD will operate since the restore image is an image of the drive and not the partition . Subsequently any use of the recovery CD after drive partition alteration will result in the loss of the altered drive configuration including data . If you tell the truth you don't have to remember anything - Mark Twain |
merlin (256) | ||
| 314111 | 2005-01-15 07:02:00 | Nopw I hate to say this but the recovery disks (CDs) will put the computer you bought back to the way it was when you bought it which is not a bad idea. Having said that you can make a new partition but the recovery disk may well destroy the new partition. I know it will with the HP, IBM Aptiva. Consider putting in a secondary Hard drive to store data or back up data to a CD or DVD. |
Elephant (599) | ||
| 314112 | 2005-01-15 08:37:00 | thank you very much guys :thumbs: i wish one day those big company's company should partition the drive, so that it can separate those documents and the whole operating system . . . . you see, if format the whole machine, it will be a hassle, have to copy to a CD and make sure it is working before i reinstall the machine . . . :dogeye: :@@: jacky |
jackyht2002 (6606) | ||
| 314113 | 2005-01-16 02:33:00 | But it's still a good idea to make a backup (and check that it works) of your data fairly often. That's to cater for the time when you lose it all -- from a disaster, not by a deliberate action like running a recovery CD. :D | Graham L (2) | ||
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