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#1
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I noticed that most computers that come with windows pre-installed usually
parition one drive into C: and D:. I sthere a valid reason for this? I am going to wipe mine our for various reason. But I am going to use one partition instead of two. Is there a technical reason to have the drive partition into two. |
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#2
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Data Segmenting or Drive Partitioning has two basic benefits. First,
Organization - keeping certain data separate from other data. Also it makes imaging an XP install or instance smaller by keeping things like personal data on a different physical disk or partition. Using a single partition causes operations like defrag and other maintenance operations to take longer to complete. With today's usage patterns many people have lots and lots of multimedia files (Music/Pictures & Videos). These can take up large amounts of space and sometimes it is more efficient to store them on individual partitions. Also, the content that is on the 1st physical partition (outer edges of the disk platter) are faster. You would want XP to reside on the first or the fastest disk areas and put less used data further into the drive. When you "Clump" everything together on a single partition, it can lead to slower overall performance as head travel requirements increase. "klafert" <klafert@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:A35205AC-5545-491E-9931-5DC8C0EDD502@microsoft.com... >I noticed that most computers that come with windows pre-installed usually > parition one drive into C: and D:. I sthere a valid reason for this? I > am > going to wipe mine our for various reason. But I am going to use one > partition instead of two. Is there a technical reason to have the drive > partition into two. > |
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#3
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=?Utf-8?B?a2xhZmVydA==?= wrote:
> > I noticed that most computers that come with windows pre-installed usually > parition one drive into C: and D:. I sthere a valid reason for this? I am > going to wipe mine our for various reason. But I am going to use one > partition instead of two. Is there a technical reason to have the drive > partition into two. Often folks use the second partition for storage of music/video files so they dont have to have their pc move them around for no reason when they defragment C: -- http://www.bootdisk.com/ |
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#4
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klafert wrote:
> I noticed that most computers that come with windows pre-installed usually > parition one drive into C: and D:. I sthere a valid reason for this? I am > going to wipe mine our for various reason. But I am going to use one > partition instead of two. Is there a technical reason to have the drive > partition into two. > Placing data files on a partition or physical hard drive separate from the operating system and applications can greatly simplify system repairs/recoveries and data back-up. But you certainly don't have to go this route, if you don't want to. -- Bruce Chambers Help us help you: http://dts-l.org/goodpost.htm http://www.catb.org/~esr/faqs/smart-questions.html You can have peace. Or you can have freedom. Don't ever count on having both at once. - RAH |
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