the best way to remove the partition is to boot up with the livecd, hit alt-f2 and type "gksudo gparted", then use that to delete the partition. Select it, delete it, hit apply. Job's a good'un.
Ubuntu user #11075
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Unless you restored your personal configuration files (files in /home), have configuration files on your Windows partitions that you have in some way set up to be used, have some unformatted partition (e.g. mounted to /home), or some other similar way in which files remain or are recovered from backups, it really shouldn't be possible for settings to remain after a clean install.
hmmm. Looks like xorg isn't quite configured correctly - the panel at the top is duplicating everything... Maybe try "dpkg-reconfigure xserver-xorg"? Backup up /etc/X11/xorg.conf first though.
Ubuntu user #11075
Howto: AwesomeWM (OUTDATED) || My BitBucket Page || My deviantArt page
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Seems to be working fine now, thank you!
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