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Fri, 30 Mar 2001 23:36:11 +0200 |
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That's a lot of questions.
FDISK should take care of your worrys. I believe the maximum number of
partitions is 24. (There being 26 letters in the alphabet and A and B being
used for Floppy drives).
There may be a limit on size of partitions, depending on the system you
built and your OS. I doubt though that this will have an influence given
todays hardware. I think the only concern would be the OS you are installing
and the type of partition you want to create.
In terms of using hard drive manufacturers software - it wont harm you. I
use Western Digital's software all the time. Bear in mind though that this
software is usually specfic for a manufacturers drive.
Size of partition for OS? Can't answer that one. I don't really have a
preference, which is what I guess it boils down to. I know some prefer to
have one partition for the OS, another for apps, another for files, another
for.....whatever.
Good luck
Brendon
>I have just assembled a new computer and want to install an OS. I have
>formatted and installed new OS before, so that is not a problem, but this
>time I want to install multiple partitions.
>I checked several partition managers, but they seemed more complex than I
>need, multi OS, up to 200 partitions, etc. I will use one OS, and will
>not need more than four partitions.
>Will FDISK, Format commands take care of my needs, or do I need to know
>or use something else? Is there a limit on size of partitions using
>FDISK? I have some hard drive manufacturers software, such as DiskManager
>and DiscWizard. Better to use one of those?
>How do I know how large a partition to leave for OS?
<Snip>
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