The time has come for me to wipe out my current installation of Win98SE tonight and start over with a fresh installation. I currently have my 30Gb hard drive partitioned into to two drives, C: and D:.
Windows is installed on c: along with a few programs such as email and icq. All of my other software titles (games mostly) are installed from the d: drive along with mp3's and other important documents.
I understand that by formating I will have to reinstall all software and drivers regardless of which drive.
So my question, if I use the format c: command, the only part of the drive that will be formatted will be c: and it will not affect or erase any of the data on d:, right? So if I download the most current drivers for my hardware someplace on d:, I should be able to access those files after reinstalling Windows, and install them from there. I know this sounds like a dumb question, and I feel pretty confident that the d: partition will not have any data loss, but I have read so many online guides over the last couple of days that always stress that everything on your "hard drive" will be lost by using format c: and I just want to double check. I realize that the fdisk command would in fact erase everything along with the partitions themselves, but both guides I have read stressed the word "hard drive" instead of just saying the "c: partition", so I am a little nervous.
Secondly, what is the exact sequence in doing this? I built this computer from scratch a few months ago, but the hard drive was brand new and I did not have to do any formatting of old data. I guess you just boot to a DOS prompt, go to c:\ and type format c:, is this correct?
Any responses greatly appreciated,
Gamble
Windows is installed on c: along with a few programs such as email and icq. All of my other software titles (games mostly) are installed from the d: drive along with mp3's and other important documents.
I understand that by formating I will have to reinstall all software and drivers regardless of which drive.
So my question, if I use the format c: command, the only part of the drive that will be formatted will be c: and it will not affect or erase any of the data on d:, right? So if I download the most current drivers for my hardware someplace on d:, I should be able to access those files after reinstalling Windows, and install them from there. I know this sounds like a dumb question, and I feel pretty confident that the d: partition will not have any data loss, but I have read so many online guides over the last couple of days that always stress that everything on your "hard drive" will be lost by using format c: and I just want to double check. I realize that the fdisk command would in fact erase everything along with the partitions themselves, but both guides I have read stressed the word "hard drive" instead of just saying the "c: partition", so I am a little nervous.
Secondly, what is the exact sequence in doing this? I built this computer from scratch a few months ago, but the hard drive was brand new and I did not have to do any formatting of old data. I guess you just boot to a DOS prompt, go to c:\ and type format c:, is this correct?
Any responses greatly appreciated,
Gamble