Partitioning
Hudson Delbert J Contr 61 CS/SCBN
Delbert.Hudson at LOSANGELES.AF.MIL
Thu Oct 28 16:13:45 UTC 2004
whoa...druid, fdisk are not anymore difficult to use than any other
partitioning software. one does have to read a bit, but any new experience
requires some learning. i think it counter-productive to disseminate
negative info about tools used in the unix world unless onecanuse it
themselves.
lets not scare newbs off. i think at least trying to explain the diffs
between
how winsuxorbloze vs. *nix wouldgo further than stating that some tools
is too hard to use. that creatinga larger learning curve than really needed.
if we want converts to *nix we must help by teaching instead of bashing by
habit.
the reason i keep hammering hat thisis unux is because it really is unix.
go look up the meaning of clone.
~piranha
-----Original Message-----
From: ubuntu-users-bounces at lists.ubuntu.com
[mailto:ubuntu-users-bounces at lists.ubuntu.com]On Behalf Of Christoph
Georgi
Sent: Thursday, October 28, 2004 2:29 AM
To: Ubuntu Users
Subject: Re: Partitioning
I would advice you to use partition magic, if you're a newbie. The linux
partitioning tools are not as easy to use as pm (althought I can't tell
of the partitioning tool of ubuntu). But be aware that partition magic
can't handle files larger than 4 GB (at least I had a problems with
those). I would recommend making a backup of your most important files
just in case..
Christoph
Richard Barry wrote:
>Is there anything similar to Partition Magic available for Linux? I
remember the partitioning tool used in Mandrake can resize and move
partitions, even NTFS.
>
>
>
>>-----Original Message-----
>>From: ubuntu-users-bounces at lists.ubuntu.com
>>[mailto:ubuntu-users-bounces at lists.ubuntu.com]On Behalf Of Jeff Waugh
>>Sent: 28 October 2004 09:58
>>To: Ubuntu Users
>>Subject: Re: Partitioning
>>
>>
>>On Thu, 2004-10-28 at 21:47 +1300, Mike Finn wrote:
>>
>>
>>>I have a laptop with Windows XP sp2, 2.4ghz intel
>>>mobile cpu, 1gig ram, 32mb vid card, 30gb harddrive with
>>>
>>>
>>12.5 gig free.
>>
>>
>>
>>>1: Should the Linux partition be before the existing
>>>
>>>
>>partition or after?
>>
>>
>>>2: Should there be just one partion ready for Ubuntu or
>>>
>>>
>>should I create
>>
>>
>>>the boot and swap as well?
>>>3: Partition Magic comes with "BootMagic"... Is this the
>>>
>>>
>>best way for
>>
>>
>>>dual booting?
>>>
>>>
>>1) Doesn't matter. :-)
>>
>>2) There'll be two, one for the filesystem, one for swap. In the
>>installer, choose 'manually partiton', then you can tell it to
>>automatically configure the free space. The setup it chooses will be
>>good for your system.
>>
>>3) Nah, Ubuntu comes with grub, which is cooler (and more helpful, if
>>you end up learning it). After you install, it should
>>automatically have
>>Ubuntu and Windows in the grub menu for you to choose from.
>>
>>:-)
>>
>>- Jeff
>>
>>--
>>Ooh, ooh, ooh! http://www.ubuntulinux.org/
>> Ubuntu!
>>
>>--
>>ubuntu-users mailing list
>>ubuntu-users at lists.ubuntu.com
>>http://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-users
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>
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