Re: Partitioned hard drive



I disagree with the Fat32 / NTFS. I do beleive that NTFS is more stable of
a FAT system than 32.

if the Bios doesn't see the drives correctly you may want to try auto and
not user if it is set to user defined. If system still doesn't see the rest
of the drive (use fdisk.exe to see drive information on a FAT32/Win98
system) you will need a disk manager from the peps that make the HD. Maxtor
ship with all there drive and should be able to dl one from the Inet.


"Ghostrider" <-00-@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote in message
news:%23ssLurecFHA.2664@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>
> Ramon&Chris wrote:
>
> > I purchased a used Dell computer--they had taken off all of the
programs, and
> > it was up to me to install the O/S and any of my own programs.
> >
> > I installed Windows 98 which I already owned, and then I decided to
upgrade
> > to Windows 2000, so I bought that program and upgraded the O/S.....
> >
> > Now I'm trying to install Microsoft Office, and it's telling me I don't
have
> > enough hard drive space. The computer should have at leas 9G hard drive
but
> > going into My Computer, shows only about 1.5G.
> >
> > I am not very experienced with computers, and through trying to solve
the
> > problem, I came across a device manager that showed the hard drive to
have
> > the 1.5G available and approx. 9G not in use.
> >
> > Now I can't find that device manager thing again, and I don't know how
to
> > merge the 2 so that my full 9G is available to me.
> >
> > Any thoughts...or ideas...or help would be greatly appreciated...and
> > remember, I'm new at this, so hopefully the answer won't be too
technical.
>
> The straight-forward way to install Windows 2000 is to do a
> clean install by booting from the Windows 2000 cdrom. If the
> computer can see the entire 9 GB of the hard drive (i.e., that
> the bios allows it), then let Windows 2000 setup configure the
> entire 9 GB as a single partition. If logical partitions are
> wanted as well, then configure Drive C with something less than
> 9 GB, e.g., 3 GB. After Windows 2000 has been installed, Disk
> Management can be used to set up a 6 GB extended partition with,
> for example, 2 logical drives (D and E) of 3 GB each. Whichever
> way you want to do it...and, BTW, FAT32 or NTFS is not really an
> important consideration (other than for security) when working
> with 9 GB drives.


.



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