SUOrangeman
Diamond Member
I come to ... fix all of these "How should I partition my new mega-multi-jiggala-byte hard drive?" threads.
Many of the "wise owls" (take that very lightly) will quickly post something like "Make 5GB for Windows, 15GB for programs, and the rest for data/mp3s/downloads/etc." While this isn't bad advice necessarily, I still cringe when folks suggest that the Windows (or \WINNT) directory and program files be on separate partitions. Maybe I am wrong, but I firmly believe that is your Windows partition goes south, you'll likely have to do a lot of reinstalling on the programs partition to get everything working again. Yes, there are some well-written tools that will survive a "Windows directory" reinstall, but I don't think that a majority of today's software can make that claim. But, I digress ... for now.
I am here today to ask a simple question. HOW MUCH DISK SPACE ARE YOU ACTUALLY USING?
Most of my installs have the following pattern:
C: is ~1GB FAT32 used for page/swap file and temp files.
D: is ~4 to 8GB for Windows, Program Files, and the "main" Documents & Settings folder
E: through (XYZ: ) will be personal documents, downloads, MP3s, games, backups, etc.
On my 2-month-old WinXP install at work, I'm using 256MB on C:, 3.83GB on D:, 4.13GB for personal documents, and I have 27.2GB worth of software downloads on a separate, dedicated hard drive. So, I could probably get away with a 20GB drive if I were only running WinXP on this box ... and I didn't archive the programs I download.
At home, Win2K is my main OS. After roughly three years of use, C: is less than half full (~500MB or so in use, likely less), D: is approaching 3GB, personal files are less than 1GB, and MP3s/games/downloads/other OSes fill out the rest of my drives.
Aside from installing full games to the programs "area," I'd be willing to bet that most users have the same amount of usage, if not less. Am I way off base?
-SUO