Published on February 1, 2005 By Eddie Hill In Windows XP
I only recently switched over to XP and finaly bougt a second drive with 160 gig.
my old harddrive is 20 gig (this was a dreammachine 4 years ago!) it's partitinoned
like this C:\= 10 gig D:\=5 gig E:\=5 gig
but i'm runing out of room on the C:\ drive, partitionmagic is 89 dollars so that's not
an option now i read somewhere that somebody install all his programs on his next drive
and leaves the C:\ drive for windows. is this an option, i seem to remmeber it wasn't a good
idear under windows 98SE but it might have changed for XP

Answers very much apreciated, it would save me a format C:

Cheers Eddie

Comments
on Apr 05, 2005
Sorry nobody has answered you yet. Hope you are still checking this
It is actually a great idea to have the c:\ just as a boot partition. You should probably start from scratch though just to make things all clean. I've got my c:\ as the boot partition, d:\ for installing programs onto and e:\ for all the data files (docs, graphics, music, etc.) When I need to do a backup, I just backup the entire e drive.
on Apr 25, 2005
If you're careful with your icon "properties", XP will gladly accept a bunch of partitions and/or drives for all kinds of personalized setups, so have at it and just be mindful of all those paths.
Good Luck, Eddie!
on Apr 25, 2005
I've always been a 'partition & separate' person especially OS & apps.

In the end, the design of XP is such that wherever you install apps, they fill the registry with gunk and paths pointing to hither & yon that it probably makes very little practical difference to separate the OS & programs.

I always dreamed of being able to reinstall the OS without having to reinstall all the apps to but the infiltration of the registry makes it all but impossible.

Keeping your data separate makes sense for easier backups and/or transfers to new systems so that's probably a good idea.


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