Originally posted by: tigersty1e
Wouldn't this cause problems with programs that are already installed because of registry problems?
Sometimes a program wirtes something to the registry, but if you do a clean install only on the OS partition, that registry file is gone, right?
Originally posted by: Arkitech
I'm going to build a new system soon and I'm just curious about what advantages there are in creating a seperate partition for the OS. Also how much space should I set aside for an XP or Vista install?
That may be preferred by you since your OS is on a drive which is only 74GB!Originally posted by: Tweakin
Originally posted by: Arkitech
I'm going to build a new system soon and I'm just curious about what advantages there are in creating a seperate partition for the OS. Also how much space should I set aside for an XP or Vista install?
The prefered method is to use two drives, one for the OS and the secondary for the Data.
No, it does not. I don't think anyone said it did.using two partitions on a single drive works for data recovery, but has no significant throughput advantage.
Unless your OS drive is a 500GB drive. Then, imaging and restoring the entire drive will be impractical and slow!Additionally, you can perform a full Ghost image of your OS drive and store it on the Secondary drive. Recovery is complete and fast.
Imaging and restoring the image will be much easier if you are only imaging the OS (smaller image).Originally posted by: Arkitech
I'm going to build a new system soon and I'm just curious about what advantages there are in creating a seperate partition for the OS.
If you only have the OS and not the programs, have 8GB for XP and 30GB for Vista and 40GB for Vista 64.Also how much space should I set aside for an XP or Vista install?
Originally posted by: Azn
I've had separate partitions since 1998. 1 for os and rest for files.
Originally posted by: MeStinkBAD
I assume your including not only the Windows Folder, but the Program Files directory, maybe the user directories. Because Windows and the programs it runs always store the full path to a particular destination that you can't just move stuff around. And if you can't move stuff around then what's the point in spreading data accross several partitions.Originally posted by: Azn
I've had separate partitions since 1998. 1 for os and rest for files.
Originally posted by: beany323
If i already have a 500mb hdd, and on it there is a o/s, can i partition it now?
I have done so with a new hdd and not sure if i cant mess it up..
Originally posted by: Navid
Unless your OS drive is a 500GB drive. Then, imaging and restoring the entire drive will be impractical and slow!
Originally posted by: jonmcc33
It only backs up the actual data. How can you back up blank data?Originally posted by: Navid
Unless your OS drive is a 500GB drive. Then, imaging and restoring the entire drive will be impractical and slow!![]()