Heh, I thought putting Linux on a second drive with its own partition was making it easiest, so i could just wipe the partition when i didn't want linux anymore
In any case, I had used linux for a few years many years ago, so I know how much i dislike it already

and would not use it unless it was for work, so I would want some extra space and run it in its own file system
Also, if I want to have a big (2-5gb) partition for work space for sound/video editting, would it be fastest with FAT32 or NTFS? or does it not make any noticable difference?
I used to separate my partitions into an OS partition (with 4 partitions for os/2, linux, NT, windows), and then apps/user files partition
This never worked well because many of the apps I installed would stick things into c: without letting me have a choice about it, and fill up my OS partitions
AND when I reinstalled the OS, i'd have to reinstall all the programs anyway because of registry issues (and all the files they stuffed into c

that's why i just started using a huge partition
Oh, and there were 2 things in your doc that weren't clear to me
1) How can I force a FAT16 partition as c:?
2) The whole section about adding linux as an option to the NT loader is confusing.. namely "grab the first 512 bytes of a bootable partition etc etc"
I have no idea how to do that.
And my last question is, what do you use to set up the partitions? Should I put it into a working system as a slave and set up all the partitions with fdisk first, and then take it out and start installin os's?