siafulinux
September 13th, 2007, 06:21 AM
This is in response to the original post at http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=538010
Hi Jean-Claude.
Speaking of wasted partitions. I recently got a Dell XPS M1710 with Vista Business. It came with four paritions. That's right, count em, four partitions:
1. the standard Dell 48mb partition right at the front of the drive that has no drive letter. Every Dell has one of these.
2. The main data drive (NTFS)
3. A drive labeled 'recovery' with some Vista OS files on it
4. A small partition wasted, not assigned to any drive
I could not believe this. I wanted to put Ubuntu 7.04 on this laptop and I cannot now unless:
a. someone knows a way around the four partition limit on any one physical drive
b. someone knows how to consolidate these partitions without me wiping and re-installing.
I guess if I get mad enough I may rip the whole thing apart and consolidate Vista onto a single partition.
Rick
Wow four! I was surprised to hear of three on my friend's laptop; 2 33 gigs partitions, one with Vista and one called Data and then a 7.5 gig restore partition. We simply used the 3rd DATA partition and everything is working fine.
As for your's I probably wouldn't get rid of the Dell partition; I've heard of systems and seen one laptop in particular that used just such a setup for some "extra" BIOS or other data that the system needed. Yes I know, it's pathetic. I'm not sure if Dell does this or not, but I would assume this is the case. I believe EMachine systems are the same, but I could be wrong.
Does your recovery setup allow you to make backup discs from within Vista? I remember my HP desktop system originally asked me to make backup DVD's or CD's at first boot and had a menu option to do so, but only one set. The system now proudly has Kubuntu and only Kubuntu! :-)
What I am suggesting is possibly creating your backup discs and this way you can remove the recovery partition and that "extra" one. Then resize your main NTFS partition to give you even more free space using QTParted from the Ubuntu Live-CD.
You'll end up with:
1. The 48mb Dell partition needed.
2. The main NTFS/Vista drive and
3. Free space on which to create your Ubuntu setup.
4. Still have backup Vista discs, just in case!
Otherwise if you are not interested in keeping Vista, you can simply get rid of 2, 3 and 4 and have the 48mb Dell partition and free space to use nothing but pure Ubuntu with! :KS
Before you do anything though, make sure you have backup discs for Vista (you've already paid for it, might as well keep a copy) and then have backed up any important data on the system that you want to keep!
Jean-Claude
Hi Jean-Claude.
Speaking of wasted partitions. I recently got a Dell XPS M1710 with Vista Business. It came with four paritions. That's right, count em, four partitions:
1. the standard Dell 48mb partition right at the front of the drive that has no drive letter. Every Dell has one of these.
2. The main data drive (NTFS)
3. A drive labeled 'recovery' with some Vista OS files on it
4. A small partition wasted, not assigned to any drive
I could not believe this. I wanted to put Ubuntu 7.04 on this laptop and I cannot now unless:
a. someone knows a way around the four partition limit on any one physical drive
b. someone knows how to consolidate these partitions without me wiping and re-installing.
I guess if I get mad enough I may rip the whole thing apart and consolidate Vista onto a single partition.
Rick
Wow four! I was surprised to hear of three on my friend's laptop; 2 33 gigs partitions, one with Vista and one called Data and then a 7.5 gig restore partition. We simply used the 3rd DATA partition and everything is working fine.
As for your's I probably wouldn't get rid of the Dell partition; I've heard of systems and seen one laptop in particular that used just such a setup for some "extra" BIOS or other data that the system needed. Yes I know, it's pathetic. I'm not sure if Dell does this or not, but I would assume this is the case. I believe EMachine systems are the same, but I could be wrong.
Does your recovery setup allow you to make backup discs from within Vista? I remember my HP desktop system originally asked me to make backup DVD's or CD's at first boot and had a menu option to do so, but only one set. The system now proudly has Kubuntu and only Kubuntu! :-)
What I am suggesting is possibly creating your backup discs and this way you can remove the recovery partition and that "extra" one. Then resize your main NTFS partition to give you even more free space using QTParted from the Ubuntu Live-CD.
You'll end up with:
1. The 48mb Dell partition needed.
2. The main NTFS/Vista drive and
3. Free space on which to create your Ubuntu setup.
4. Still have backup Vista discs, just in case!
Otherwise if you are not interested in keeping Vista, you can simply get rid of 2, 3 and 4 and have the 48mb Dell partition and free space to use nothing but pure Ubuntu with! :KS
Before you do anything though, make sure you have backup discs for Vista (you've already paid for it, might as well keep a copy) and then have backed up any important data on the system that you want to keep!
Jean-Claude