Re: Partitions

Tech-Archive recommends: Speed Up your PC by fixing your registry

From: George Hester (hesterloli_at_hotmail.com)
Date: 01/03/05


Date: Mon, 3 Jan 2005 17:51:33 -0500

Well remember Dewey there is no DOS in Windows 2000. There is an emulator so that being said
would you trust PM to use a DOS on your machine that only exists as a Windows component? I
wouldn't. Cruising for a bruiser there. That's why you don't want to use the GUI. It pops out of
Windows into a DOS session at boot which the Op Sys cannot provide. PM actually has its own DOS
which is what you get with the Emergency Disks. Let that do DOS. They're made for it.

As for your partitioning. One thing about Outlook pst they should be in:

C:\Documents and Settings\%profile%\Local Settings\Application Data\Microsoft\Outlook

No where else of course assuming %windir%=C:\WINNT and %profile% is who you logged into
Windows 2000 as.

You can expand your C partition to as much available unformatted space that you have that is
contiguous to it. I have never once had any problems doing this with the Emergency disks. With the
GUI yes PROBLEMS and the fix was a call to PowerQuest. Do not expect that from Norton sorry Symantec. Will never happen.

Well if you don't have free space next to C you can shift all the partitions up so that you are left with
unformatted space next to C. I am assuming you have Windows 2000 installed on C. In any case you
have to manipulate the partitions to get free space next to C so you can enlarge it.

As for the backups. Well here is where I'll get into trouble. If you use the floppies there is no need to.
If you use the GUI hands up I give up. You can check the partition before you work on it in PM. That
helps. But the issue here is do you have anything that might interfere with the process? Windows XP in
the same system?-maybe. PM 8 with fix was supposed to fix that but I wouldn't trust them Windows
2000 Server in the System?- Use PM 5. Other than that PM is a rock-solid application (used from the
floppies) make the backups if you want and you'll just have to increase the stuff you dust off in the
Spring. No biggie.

-- 
George Hester
_________________________________
"Dewey" <dewey3k@gmail.com> wrote in message news:1104786983.099981.208240@z14g2000cwz.googlegroups.com...
> 
> George Hester wrote:
> > Just don't do any partituioning using the Windows GUI.  It really
> doesn't matter PM 8 will jump out of
> > Windows into a DOS session at reboot.  But then why do that?  Install
> PM8; make the emergency
> > floppies; use those for all your partitioning needs.  As for
> uninstalling PM 8 it is your call.  It doesn't
> > matter either way.  It's just that after you make the floppies it's
> pretty useless.  IMHO.
> >
> > Remember if you have partition problems (great liklihood using the
> GUI) PowerQuest no longer exists.
> > Now you got Norton and I can tell you you will never get any
> substantial help from them.
> >
> Hi George,
> 
> I appreciate your taking time to respond. I've taken your advice on
> servicepackfiles to heart. Here's my situation: my original laptop hdd
> fried and Dell gave me a replacement. I installed Win2k fresh in a 8GB
> partition. Then I created 2 more partitions: 4GB and 10 GB, leaving 16
> GB free space (all roughly). I assume that the three partitions are
> contiguous with the free space at the end of the drive. The 10 GB
> partition is a scratch partition I use for things like Photoshop
> scratch and I store a copy of most recent Norton Ghost backup of
> primary partition there for emergencies. I can delete it if need be.
> The second partition has all my work-related stuff, my outlook.pst and
> "my documents." I could Ghost it (and probably will just to be safe)
> before repartitioning. With all that said, if I want to expand the c:
> drive by 50% (to 12 GB), what is the best way to go about this? Ghost
> it, repartition with PM8 and then have the Ghost just in case? Will PM8
> be able to move my d: drive so that the expanded c: drive is
> contiguous? Does it even need to be contiguous? And what is wrong with
> using the GUI? I thought that worked like Ghost, where it just sets up
> a script which is not executed until you reboot into dos. Is that
> wrong?
> 
> Thanks again for your help.
> 


Relevant Pages

  • Re: Space required by windows xp
    ... How large is your D partition and how much free space? ... It is likely that an allocation of 12% has been made to System Restore on ... drive (where windows is located) is 13.7 gig with 1.25 gig of free space. ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: Does FAT32 restrict me to max filesize of 4GB?
    ... of free space for temp files and defragging. ... the conversion will take place at the next reboot. ... Colin Barnhorst [MVP Windows - Virtual Machine] ... I can use PM to make me a new partition (I have 29 gigs ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.basics)
  • Re: Impossible Partition Delete
    ... You can do it from DOS, even if you loaded DOS from the partiton in ... and not a command prompt under Windows. ... Windows 98 system with FDISK on it. ... You can also do it with Partition Magic, whose CD is bootable (and you ...
    (microsoft.public.windowsxp.general)
  • Re: Finally reloaded Windows on one of my machines!
    ... partition and start over with a single drive. ... running the Windows defrag utility that demands 15% free space, ... "It's BSD Unix with Apple's APIs and GUI on top of it' -- 'nothing but BSD Unix' ...
    (comp.sys.mac.advocacy)
  • Re: Re-installing Windows XP on Compaq Presario 1714TC
    ... You could reinstall by running Winnt32 from Windows, but it would not be a "clean" install. ... That is the DOS setup program. ... One of it's options is to reformat the install partition, and doing so would give you a clean install. ... There are other ways to skin this cat, you could boot from a DOS boot floppy that had support for some type of external storage device, Jazz or other Iomega or Syquest drives to which you had copied a Windows XP CD, etc. ...
    (comp.sys.laptops)