Partitioning Hard Drive #2

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  1. #1

    Default Partitioning Hard Drive #2

    Let's conduct a survey about partitioning my hard drive! Whichever choice
    is selected the most is probably the way I'll go about partitioning my hard
    drive. (Or I could draw from a hat.) If I have to reinstall Windows XP,
    that's not a big deal.

    Here's my second partitioning my hard drive question. My original plan was
    partitioning my 80 gig hard drive in half - one half for XP and one half for
    Vista. Here are a couple different ways. Which way do you think is the
    best? I plan on installing all the software on Vista that I have installed
    on XP also to test to see what software works with Vista and what doesn't.
    No matter which way I go from what's below, it should work, correct?

    As a little throw in, what actual difference would I see in performance
    between a 2MB cache and an 8MB cache hard drive in Vista?

    (Firstly, I have two hard drive - an 80 gig WD 7200RPM 2MB Cache IDE hard
    drive MASTER and a 120 gig WD 7200RPM 8MB Cache IDE hard drive SLAVE)
    PRIMARY currently has 61.9GB free with 12.5GB used (one partition with XP)
    SECONDARY currently has 102GB free with 9.65GB used (one partition used for
    storage)

    Method 1) (The original method)
    Partition 80GB hard drive
    40GB partition C: - Windows XP
    40GB partition D: - Windows Vista
    Leave 120GB hard drive alone (will become drive E:)

    Method 2)
    Partition 80GB hard drive
    40GB partition C: - Windows XP
    40GB partition D: - Storage
    Leave 120GB hard drive alone (will become drive E: and will have Vista)

    Method 3)
    Leave 80GB hard drive alone (will stay drive C: and have XP on it - no need
    to reinstall XP)
    Partition 120GB hard drive
    80GB partition D: - Windows Vista
    40GB partition E: - Storage

    Method 4)
    Leave 80GB hard drive alone (will stay drive C: and have XP on it - no need
    to reinstall XP)
    Partition 120GB hard drive
    40GB partition D: - Windows Vista
    80GB partition E: - Storage

    Method 5)
    Leave 80GB hard drive alone (will stay drive C: and have XP on it - no need
    to reinstall XP)
    Partition 120GB hard drive
    60GB partition D: - Windows Vista
    60GB partition E: - Storage

    Method 6)
    Switch the hard drives around in my computer and make the 120GB master and
    the 80GB slave (will this mess with XP's activation if I still use the same
    hard drives just in a different order?)
    Partition 120GB hard drive
    60GB partition C: - Windows XP
    60GB partition D: - Windows Vista
    80GB E: will have storage


    Travis King Guest

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  3. #2

    Default Re: Partitioning Hard Drive #2

    An 8MB cache drive will always give you better performance than a 2MB cache
    one, whatever the OS you run on it. Before you commit a whole drive to
    Vista, however, remember that when it becomes RTM, the recommended upgrade
    path is to do a clean install. At least this has been true for every past
    Microsoft OS, and in my experience a clean install has always yielded
    better, more stable, results than an in-place upgrade, even with fully
    released OSes.
    --
    Pierre Szwarc
    Paris, France
    PGP key ID 0x75B5779B
    ------------------------------------------------
    Multitasking: Reading in the bathroom !
    ------------------------------------------------

    "Travis King" <Anonymous@none.com> a écrit dans le message de news:
    [email]OGXPrckRGHA.4920@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl[/email]...
    | Let's conduct a survey about partitioning my hard drive! Whichever choice
    | is selected the most is probably the way I'll go about partitioning my
    hard
    | drive. (Or I could draw from a hat.) If I have to reinstall Windows XP,
    | that's not a big deal.
    [snip]


    Pierre Szwarc Guest

  4. #3

    Default Re: Partitioning Hard Drive #2

    I've always done clean installs of OSs in the past. I tried doing an
    upgrade once with XP once on a different computer that had Windows ME and it
    was a mess. From driver conflicts, software not working, to more hard disk
    usage. I regretted that decision and started over with a fresh install and
    have always done a clean install since.
    Now a question:
    How much of a difference *will I notice* between the 8MB cache hard drive
    and a 2MB cache hard drive? If we're talking something like 1% or less, I
    probably won't bother, but otherwise, I will consider switching the hard
    drives' positions around. (Especially since it won't cost me anything to
    make my OS run faster.) Spring break's coming up this week, so I might
    begin the transformation. I probably should do it at the same time that I
    get my new video card. The 120-gig hard drive is a year newer than my
    80-gig.
    "Pierre Szwarc" <pierre_szwarc@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:upoybxnRGHA.4740@TK2MSFTNGP14.phx.gbl...
    > An 8MB cache drive will always give you better performance than a 2MB
    > cache
    > one, whatever the OS you run on it. Before you commit a whole drive to
    > Vista, however, remember that when it becomes RTM, the recommended upgrade
    > path is to do a clean install. At least this has been true for every past
    > Microsoft OS, and in my experience a clean install has always yielded
    > better, more stable, results than an in-place upgrade, even with fully
    > released OSes.
    > --
    > Pierre Szwarc
    > Paris, France
    > PGP key ID 0x75B5779B
    > ------------------------------------------------
    > Multitasking: Reading in the bathroom !
    > ------------------------------------------------
    >
    > "Travis King" <Anonymous@none.com> a écrit dans le message de news:
    > [email]OGXPrckRGHA.4920@tk2msftngp13.phx.gbl[/email]...
    > | Let's conduct a survey about partitioning my hard drive! Whichever
    > choice
    > | is selected the most is probably the way I'll go about partitioning my
    > hard
    > | drive. (Or I could draw from a hat.) If I have to reinstall Windows
    > XP,
    > | that's not a big deal.
    > [snip]
    >
    >

    Travis King Guest

  5. #4

    Default Re: Partitioning Hard Drive #2

    I can't tell you how much of a difference *you* will notice, because it
    depends a lot on the type of applications you run. If you do a lot of
    RAM-intensive work such as 3D rendering or image processing, you'll only
    notice a difference upon opening or saving files. If you do database
    development, OTOH, the benefit will be quite obvious.
    --
    Pierre Szwarc
    Paris, France
    PGP key ID 0x75B5779B
    ------------------------------------------------
    Multitasking: Reading in the bathroom !
    ------------------------------------------------

    "Travis King" <Anonymous@none.com> a écrit dans le message de news:
    uqv$LcuRGHA.2088@TK2MSFTNGP14.phx.gbl...
    | I've always done clean installs of OSs in the past. I tried doing an
    | upgrade once with XP once on a different computer that had Windows ME and
    it
    | was a mess. From driver conflicts, software not working, to more hard
    disk
    | usage. I regretted that decision and started over with a fresh install
    and
    | have always done a clean install since.
    | Now a question:
    | How much of a difference *will I notice* between the 8MB cache hard drive
    | and a 2MB cache hard drive? If we're talking something like 1% or less, I
    | probably won't bother, but otherwise, I will consider switching the hard
    | drives' positions around. (Especially since it won't cost me anything to
    | make my OS run faster.) Spring break's coming up this week, so I might
    | begin the transformation. I probably should do it at the same time that I
    | get my new video card. The 120-gig hard drive is a year newer than my
    | 80-gig.


    Pierre Szwarc Guest

  6. #5

    Default Re: Partitioning Hard Drive #2

    Would DAZ Bryce 5.5 be considered intense 3D rendering?
    "Pierre Szwarc" <pierre_szwarc@hotmail.com> wrote in message
    news:OGNdNnuRGHA.3052@TK2MSFTNGP09.phx.gbl...
    >I can't tell you how much of a difference *you* will notice, because it
    > depends a lot on the type of applications you run. If you do a lot of
    > RAM-intensive work such as 3D rendering or image processing, you'll only
    > notice a difference upon opening or saving files. If you do database
    > development, OTOH, the benefit will be quite obvious.
    > --
    > Pierre Szwarc
    > Paris, France
    > PGP key ID 0x75B5779B
    > ------------------------------------------------
    > Multitasking: Reading in the bathroom !
    > ------------------------------------------------
    >
    > "Travis King" <Anonymous@none.com> a écrit dans le message de news:
    > uqv$LcuRGHA.2088@TK2MSFTNGP14.phx.gbl...
    > | I've always done clean installs of OSs in the past. I tried doing an
    > | upgrade once with XP once on a different computer that had Windows ME
    > and
    > it
    > | was a mess. From driver conflicts, software not working, to more hard
    > disk
    > | usage. I regretted that decision and started over with a fresh install
    > and
    > | have always done a clean install since.
    > | Now a question:
    > | How much of a difference *will I notice* between the 8MB cache hard
    > drive
    > | and a 2MB cache hard drive? If we're talking something like 1% or less,
    > I
    > | probably won't bother, but otherwise, I will consider switching the hard
    > | drives' positions around. (Especially since it won't cost me anything
    > to
    > | make my OS run faster.) Spring break's coming up this week, so I might
    > | begin the transformation. I probably should do it at the same time that
    > I
    > | get my new video card. The 120-gig hard drive is a year newer than my
    > | 80-gig.
    >
    >

    Travis King Guest

  7. #6

    Default Re: Partitioning Hard Drive #2

    I think so.
    --
    Pierre Szwarc
    Paris, France
    PGP key ID 0x75B5779B
    ------------------------------------------------
    Multitasking: Reading in the bathroom !
    ------------------------------------------------

    "Travis King" <Anonymous@none.com> a écrit dans le message de news:
    %23GSsu3uRGHA.252@TK2MSFTNGP10.phx.gbl...
    | Would DAZ Bryce 5.5 be considered intense 3D rendering?


    Pierre Szwarc Guest

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