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Oct 20 2009, 03:19 PM
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#1
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![]() Silver Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 410 Joined: 15-June 07 From: England, UK Member No.: 70,781 Operating System: • Windows Vista - Home Basic sp2• |
Free From Pre-Installed Programs & Partitions Hi This post has been edited by manicd: Oct 20 2009, 03:43 PM |
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Oct 20 2009, 04:43 PM
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#2
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![]() Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Visiting Tech Posts: 887 Joined: 15-May 09 From: UK Member No.: 85,793 Operating System: Win 98se, Windows 2000, xp Home sp3, xp Pro sp3, Vista Ultimate 32bit\64bit. |
Store bought systems use partitions (often hidden) to store the OS and install\recovery files on, and rarely do you get a disk any more, they also tend to include recovery software\instructions, and if you ever want to wipe everything maybe through infection or selling it on at a future point, you use this procedure to restore it to out of the box state, and make you you select destructive recovery to ensure wiping ALL files other than what comes with the system, once done it will be like you just bought the system, first boot will ask names etc to create accounts and that before you can start using it.
From what you appear to be after this it what it sounds like you want to do now, I appreciate you don't want all that comes with this, but it's the safest approach, if you try and create a new install you run the risk of wiping\corrupting the hidden partition the system uses to recover itself, more so when formatting, and once thats gone thats it so my best advice is use the systems recovery option ands go back to out of the box, this will give you a clean install which is your first goal. Once reinstalled you can delete the partition you don't want, eg D:\, but do NOT touch the small partition, this is required by the system, I don't know what it's for exactly, but my fear is deleting it could cause serious corruption making future recovery impossible, so as I can't be sure I wont go further except to say don't touch that unless you know exactly what it would mean to the system. The D:\ drive however can be happily deleted, and the space recovered back to the C:\ drive so you in effect have a single hard drive, the problem I have here is although I know it can be done, and that I can do it, I can't guide very well, it's one of the areas I stumble around in, but not often enough to have a deep knowledge in it, but the software I have used for this in the past is Partition Magic, but it isn't free, although the free trial may allow full function to use for your needs, but here are some links to do with this area, hope they help. http://support.microsoft.com/kb/325590 http://social.answers.microsoft.com/Forums...7d-9fba387e4f0d 3rd response suggests it may be possible using vista, no real instruction but a picture shows some promise. http://www.vistarewired.com/2007/02/16/how...n-windows-vista This looks like a solution, it takes the previous link to include further instructions, hope something here helps. |
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Oct 21 2009, 09:23 AM
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#3
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![]() Silver Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 410 Joined: 15-June 07 From: England, UK Member No.: 70,781 Operating System: • Windows Vista - Home Basic sp2• |
Hi 8210Guy
Store bought systems use partitions (often hidden) to store the OS and install\recovery files on. Yes that's correct these OS files are stored on the PQSERVIVE Partition which is about 10GB in size & is hidden, so I'll leave that well alone. The D:\ drive however can be happily deleted, and the space recovered back to the C:\ drive so you in effect have a single hard drive I think the D:\ drive has something to do with any Backups Acer makes. I also read that the "My Documents" Folder can be stored here so if the user needed to do a factory restore the files in the folder would remain once the restore has been completed. I'd rather not store documents; Music, picture etc locally to the D:\ drive but instead use Acronis & an external Hard Drive to make any backups. It has also been suggested to me that Programs & Applications can be installed on the D:\. I tried this on my old laptop but all it did was store the files on D: and took the memory from the C:\ drive. In addition to this when I had to do a factory restore none of the programs worked & I was just left with a load of dead files on D:\So would it be safe to at least shrink it to a size that will allocate more space to the C:\ drive rather than deleting it all together? |
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Oct 21 2009, 10:07 AM
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#4
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![]() Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Visiting Tech Posts: 887 Joined: 15-May 09 From: UK Member No.: 85,793 Operating System: Win 98se, Windows 2000, xp Home sp3, xp Pro sp3, Vista Ultimate 32bit\64bit. |
Hi, yeah you can just as easily adjust the partition size(s) if you wanted to keep the D:\ partition and simply reduce it, but this can only be done with adjoining partitions (which you have here), you can't jump one to get to another, but initially you were after a single drive which is why I said to delete it, as to the location of the back up's I am unsure whether they use the C or the D drive on such builds, but I can tell you vista takes 15% by default for this, but I can tell you how to change this if you wanted to so it doesn't eat up too much space.
But a quick thing to try, it may aid identifying the restore drive location, launch the cmd console with admin rights, then copy and pate the following into it, and hit enter, if we're lucky it will report which drive it's on, been a while so can't recall what it shows now, when done type exit and enter to close the cmd prompt. CODE vssadmin list shadowstorage As to installing to the D drive, as you said it's fine for that install, but should you reinstall all of the files lose they're associations and become useless, so your left deleting junk you can't use, so stick to the C drive for installations, at least you know where you are that way, but as your no doubt aware you can set up the system so the usual My Documents etc folders are saved on the D drive, this means should the system fail, a reinstall (as long as you do not select destructive reinstall) will leave the files on the D drive which minimises the risk of lost files, but this is a PITA to set up for each program or manually remembering to save as to select the D drive each time. |
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Oct 26 2009, 03:35 PM
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#5
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![]() Silver Member ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Authentic Member Posts: 410 Joined: 15-June 07 From: England, UK Member No.: 70,781 Operating System: • Windows Vista - Home Basic sp2• |
Hi 8210GUY & thank you very much for the abundance helpful of information but I've made a sort of a U-Turn.
If you have the time would you mind having a look at my thread here please? This post has been edited by manicd: Oct 26 2009, 03:36 PM |
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Oct 26 2009, 03:58 PM
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#6
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![]() SuperMember Group: Tech Team Posts: 1,941 Joined: 7-January 09 From: Flint, Michigan Member No.: 83,485 Operating System: Windows XP, Server 2003/2008, Linux |
If you want a plain jane system without all the junk, you need a plain ol' Vista installation disc. That disc can be used with the product key attached to the bottom of your computer for a CLEAN install. Otherwise, your only option is the recovery partition or discs the manufacturer gave you.
Acer probably already paritioned your drive out into two partitions. C: and D:. I believe they are one of the manufacturers that do that. To be honest I hate the fact they do that. I consistently see this type of setup where the C: drive is completely full do to the small size they give it, and the D: drive is completely empty. Most people do not understand the difference between the C: and the D: drive and just want to click "save." Its ridiculous for the manufacturer to do this out of the box, and there is no valid reason for doing so. Vista backups are worthless as are any backups that are stored on the same hard drive that you are trying to protect. If the drive fails (about the only time you're actually going to want your backup) your backups are lost anyways. You are correct in using Acronis and an external hard drive for backups. To add to the problems, it seems many name brand machines have Vista backing up to the recovery partition (which fills up in about a week) either intentionally, or by default. Next thing you know you are getting drive space messages on a brand new machine. If you ever want the chance of recovering with the factory image you must leave the factory recovery partition. Other than that you can do what you want. I can say that installing program files on a different drive for the purpose of saving them during a reformat is useless also. There are hundreds of thousands of changes to the operating system and registry that will be made by the programs you install. Those are lost when you reinstall and the programs are broken. It will also cause you problems because too many programs are poorly written and when they end up in a location other than the default C: drive, they freak out. Storing My Documents automatically on a different drive does ease the burden of reinstalling your OS if you ever want to. My Documents can be redirected to any location by right-clicking it and click properties. |
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Oct 26 2009, 06:24 PM
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#7
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![]() Advanced Member ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Group: Visiting Tech Posts: 887 Joined: 15-May 09 From: UK Member No.: 85,793 Operating System: Win 98se, Windows 2000, xp Home sp3, xp Pro sp3, Vista Ultimate 32bit\64bit. |
Hi 8210GUY & thank you very much for the abundance helpful of information but I've made a sort of a U-Turn. If you have the time would you mind having a look at my thread here please? Replied in there for you, will probably try and get this one closed or merged for you to avoid cross talking\posting, but appleoddity makes an excellent point that if the hard drive goes bad, or even if an infection corrupted the registry bad enough the partition will be gone, and everything with it, so it does make some mockery of the idea behind it. |
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