Does anyone have all their games on a SEPARATE PARTITION? Any probs w/that?

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BFG10K

Lifer
Aug 14, 2000
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BFG10K one thing to consider. When you backup your Start Menu (manually) before the reformat and they were all pointing to drive C:/...
Obviously I was referring to the situation where the games are now sitting on D:\ (or wherever else he's decided to put them) and won't be touched if C:\ is wiped.

That way after a reinstall all you do is drop the Start Menu back into your user account and you can immediately start using it as if nothing had changed.
 

MichaelD

Lifer
Jan 16, 2001
31,528
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BFG10K and Imtim83, you guys are great. :) One thing I've always done after a fresh install is make an ERD. Emergency Repair Disk. Start/Run/NTbackup is how I get to it...a quicker way for a keyboard-happy person like myself...I am shortcut-dude. :D

I know it's not a system backup, but it does backup the registry and saved my ass twice during 2002. :Q

I'm not worried about desktop shortcuts not working. Those are easy to create/repair. I have had BAD experiences with the registry (most of them my own stupid fault :eek: Duhhh, I can edit that DWORD Rom-RAM value thingee string.....*BSOD* :Q is what usually happens.) I'm learning to not tinker so much...but hey, that's how you learn, right? ;)

Thanks a lot guys, I do appreciate it.
 

aka1nas

Diamond Member
Aug 30, 2001
4,335
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Having seperate partitions is also a godsend for defragging. I actually usually do 3 partitions:

C: for OS/Apps ~15 to 20GB
D: for Games ~20 to 30 GB
E: for Media as much storage as possible

Keeping Media seperate is nice because you can install all your filesharing apps onto that partition along with their partial directories. This is the part that always gets fragmented because you are doing the most moving of data. That way, your half downloaded kazaa files won't slow down your OS and games as much.
 

WyteWatt

Banned
Jun 8, 2001
6,255
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MichaelD you are very welcome. :)


aka1nas very true! But for some reason every time i partition my Hard drive and give my C drive for windows 2000 OS only mostly to much space and I want to beable to use some of it i get sorta mad at myself because i can't use almost every bit of my 45 gig HD space but then again i need to buy a new HD because now a days i know 45 gigs is too small.

 

Texun

Platinum Member
Oct 21, 2001
2,058
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You hit the mark, this is exactly what I have done.

I usually start with two partitions for two OS's somewhere around 5g's and then partitions for applications- MS Office, Publisher, etc., then a partition for games, MP3's, and a final partition for patches and ghost images of my other partitions. Nothing is installed on the last partition. Only files remain there.

The only reason I go with two OS's, Win98 and Win2k or XP, is because I have occasionally hosed W2K or XP to the point where I could not get back in. Rather than restore with my ghost image I can sometimes get back in with Win98 and fix the problem. Also, some apps just seem to work better with one OS than with another. If I want to test something I will use W98 first to see if I like it. I would rather not have to deal with editing the W2K or XP registry to clean up a piece of software that had a crappy uninstaller. I mention W2K and XP only because I have both but I don't usually have both installed on the drive. Win98 and Win2K is my setup now.

Ghost works great. No more messing around and wasting hours installing your apps each time you blow out the OS.

 

WyteWatt

Banned
Jun 8, 2001
6,255
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texun yep. Do you know how big a ghost image is most of the time?
MichaelD i think i am going to do the same thing you going to do and if i don't like it i can always reformat and reinstall if i have to but shouldn't have to sense i have partition magic. But sometimes i get strange errors and have to reformat after making partition so if i have to reformat and reinstall if i don't like it then thats ok to. I just know i do need a bigger hard drive than my small 45 gig HD :( Sense wasting 5 gigs for windows 2000 or windows xp has pretty much space left over but then again its always better to be safe than sorry i guess.

 

Texun

Platinum Member
Oct 21, 2001
2,058
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Originally posted by: imtim83
texun yep. Do you know how big a ghost image is most of the time?
It depends on what I have loaded in the partition. If I remember correctly, a loaded W2k or XP with the patches is somewhere in the neighborhood of 1.2g's with nothing else. I can compress them enough with Ghost to burn it to a CD. Since I can't, or won't ghost every file or app that I have, I usually try and get a CD size ghost image after the main apps have been installed. You can also span with it but I have never tried using it. I move things around too much to keep up with all the CD's.

I recently added a file box which is networked. I can now burn images in the gigabytes and move them to the server. Got spare parts? Build a server to store your images on. My first server consisted of a Celeron 500, 256 megs, cheap video card. Remote Administrator is used to in place of any kb, mouse or monitor. I use nothing but the box.

 

Davegod

Platinum Member
Nov 26, 2001
2,874
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A lot of games with work fine, although when trying to run patches on them -after a OS reinstall- you might hit problems as the patches usually check the registry for location, version etc, so they might give you errors about not being able to find the game. A few will then still allow you to point to the folder and patch up ok (often putting the relevant registry entries in along the way), others just wont patch without the registry entries. You could find the releveant registry entries and restore them but tbh unless someone thinks up some automated way of doing this, it's probably less hassle to just reinstall the games.

One thing I do for my main game, RTCW, is use winzip to copy the files like config, custom maps etc (savegames for SP games), so i have a "rtcwbackup.zip". Then when i reinstall i just patch up then unzip backup zip in the rtcw folder - make sure it uses folder names and everything will be back where it should be. Similar with IE favourites, custom taskbar menu's etc... many things can simply be added to one big zip and done at once (remember to save full folder path for this though). I guess somewhere there's some files storing my XP tweaks etc, but I dont know of them :( Any app that doesnt require registry can be backed up in full (e.g. mirc/nnscript etc); for any that cant, backup the settings files etc <- just either remember to install apps to the same path, using the defaults & maybe changing drive letter helps.

Another benefit of having most things on seperate drive is you can do the above even after a partition format + OS reinstall, should things go really bad :)

I guess thats simplar to ghosting or other backup, but i find that method simple, if a little time consuming, and very easy to extract only the files etc that you want.
 

XBoxLPU

Diamond Member
Aug 21, 2001
4,249
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I have had no problems

I have a 60gb divided 5gb for XP and 48gb for games and programs. 2 gb for swap. And a Maxtor 40gb for storage

 

Leon

Platinum Member
Nov 14, 1999
2,215
4
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The games *might* run for most part, but you will likely run into trouble when trying to update/patch the game, as most will look for registry entries. Something to keep in mind.

Re-running the setup would be a good idea.

Leon
 

Mday

Lifer
Oct 14, 1999
18,647
1
81
i put all my games on a separate partition, actually, separate drive (on a different channel).
 

dejacky

Banned
Dec 17, 2000
1,598
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i have all my games on seperate partition. Try using this program called Partition Magic. Btw, can someone pls spank me?
 

henmaster

Member
Jun 4, 2001
175
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Is it a good idea to make a partition for temporary interet files too? I'd think that would help against fragmentation. I never tried it though, I will next time I repartition.
 

MichaelD

Lifer
Jan 16, 2001
31,528
3
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It's The Thread Back From the Dead! :Q

*shrug* Since someone resurrected it, I'll just say this: I made four partitions on my 80GB drive. I have the OS on one, Games and Music on another and various crap on the other two. Everything runs just fine. Now, will it run fine if I have to wipe the OS? I dunno; haven't gotten there yet, thank goodness. All is well.

Except that I miss my RAID0 speed. :( I had gotten very used to the speed loads in games and file transfers. I may have to buy a PCI RAID card and another drive. ;)