New laptop partition sizes

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  1. Posts : 1,158
    Win7 HP (x64)/Win7 Ultimate (x64)
       #11

    Thorsen said:
    Lomai said:
    Thorsen said:
    I would probably do 80-100G for the C: and the rest on D: I am guessing it is setting it up for C: for OS and programs and D: for data storage. .
    +1 - this would be the ideal for your setup. Leave the remaining for your D-partition.
    I was wrong on this Lomai. I think his D is a recovery partition and should be the min 40G
    Thanks Thorsen.

    Tickle

    Could you give us the model number for your laptop?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 3,300
    Win7 Home Premium 64x
       #12

    tickle said:
    Yeah, it's assuming some background knowledge of hard drives which I wouldn't have thought most people have.... Thanks

    yeah right? wierd. This is not known stuff unless you've been in computers for a while. It was wrong for this company to assume everyone purchasing a new computer would know about this.

    I am sure they expected everyone to just be confused, panic, worry, and then select the default and hope for the best.

    Kudos to you on questioning and researching the issue. Bravo.
      My Computer


  3. whs
    Posts : 26,210
    Vista, Windows7, Mint Mate, Zorin, Windows 8
       #13

    Set it up to anything you like. You can always change it later once we can have a look at your Disk Management. Chances are that there are further partitions being allocated - e.g. the 100MB active boot partition and the partition with the factory image. What they call "recovery partition" now is most likely for Win7 imaging, else I would not know why they are asking for a 40GB minimum.
      My Computer

  4.    #14

    The Recovery partition will be a separate hidden partition and isn't set up by User.

    The App is asking you if you want to separate your data drive from the OS drive, a popular arrangement whereby your OS and programs are installed to the first partition C drive, then your User folders and storage are on a separate partition which acts as a data vault if the OS should fail to boot. You can then easily reimage the C drive from a Win7 backup image and your data will all be in place and up to date on D waiting for it.

    If you are going to try this, Here is the tutorial for how to set this up: User Folders - Change Default Location

    If you want to follow this approach, I recommend 50-100gb C drive depending upon how many programs you have. You can resize it later by shrinking in Disk Management, then Resizing D using free Partition Wizard bootable CD which is the best manager to do what Disk Mgmt cannot, in this case resizing the left border of a partition.

    Once set up and running, save a Win7 backup image externally along with a routine backup of D data in case of HD failure.
      My Computer


 
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