I just installed a new 200 gb seagate hd. The sole purpose of this drive is for storage. I went ahead and alocated 100% of the drive to one big partition. Are there any large benefits to breaking it up into smaller partitions?
11/5/2006 10:36:28 PM
if a partition dies, the others don't.one partition dies, one partition dies.
11/5/2006 10:38:56 PM
i always make a partition for the os and a partition for everything else
11/5/2006 10:39:52 PM
well me too, but not if
11/5/2006 10:49:03 PM
my computer is set up as follows:DISK0 - C: (windows) is 20-30gb - D: (page) is 2gb - linux partition is about 15gbDISK1 - E: (mydocs) is usually 200gb and contains my entire "My Documents"...filed up mostly with 20mb RAW files i have 3 external drives that i use just for storage (one 500gb is just for backup)if you're using it just for storage...i suggest a single partition...also, unless you access it on a regular basis, i suggest setting it up as an external drive - no reason to have it on all the time if you don't use it...just wastes drive life IMO
11/5/2006 10:49:22 PM
I currently have an 80gb external drive used for storage. I'm going to copy everything from that over to the 200gb drive and then use 80gb drive as a backup. Can anyone suggest any good software to back up my specific folders on a weekly basis?Also, would it be better to back up everything to a rar file or some other compressed format instead of just copying over all the files?[Edited on November 5, 2006 at 11:19 PM. Reason : ]
11/5/2006 11:08:42 PM
11/5/2006 11:50:37 PM
OS corruption, for one
11/5/2006 11:52:55 PM
oh, yeah, i guess so. or virus i suppose. but, meh.... in all my years with dozens of computers, i've never had either, so if you're careful, you shouldn't have to worry about that. actual hard drive failure is probably a bigger threat.
11/6/2006 12:04:40 AM
another hard drive question. I was reading the wiki page about skype and came across this nugget
11/6/2006 12:52:15 AM
That's what I've always heard, but that was vs. turning your computer on and off every day or multiple times a day. I'm not sure if it's still true if I'm just using the drive once a week for a backup.
11/6/2006 7:36:51 AM
yeah, what's the deal with that now a-days? just don't do it multiple times a day or?
11/6/2006 9:37:13 AM
ncsu's office of energy management addresses that question:http://www.ncsu.edu/energy/main.php?s=2&c=2-7
11/6/2006 1:23:48 PM
random access over a small partition will be much faster than random access over the full stroke of a drivewith that in mind, generally speaking you should create the smallest OS partition you can (I find it minimally bothersome to use a 4GB partition size for a WinXP OS partition, more or less to taste but in that ballpark), and possibly one or more application partitions, in addition to the assumed large data partitionof the application partitions, anything that is particularly I/O bound such as video editing, audio/video encoding, etc is a candidate for receiving its own partitionfinally, you should probably create an temp/incoming partition so that multiple simultaneous incoming file transfers aren't written in a fragmented manner to your data/app/system partitions[Edited on November 6, 2006 at 5:46 PM. Reason : *]
11/6/2006 5:44:59 PM
^ okay, so what's your suggested partition setup for the following specs:two sata hard drives - one 40gb and one 250gb1gb ramuser does some gaming (oblivion high on graphics and bf2 high on processor/ram)...does some video editing (mostly creating dvds from video camera footage, and then some virtualdub stuff)...does some graphics stuff with photoshopto make allowances for most of the people on here: assume some usage of bittorrent, itunes, dvddecrypter/dvdshrink so i suppose they could be using some large files[Edited on November 6, 2006 at 5:51 PM. Reason : .]
11/6/2006 5:50:29 PM
I'd use the 40GB as incoming/temp data, 4-8GB on the 250 for OS installation, 20-30GB for applications, and the remainder for sorted data and documentsI believe you can redefine the locations of "Documents and Settings", "Program Files", and even "Windows" to make it less tedious to set the installation path to your application partition for every setup and for every save browse to your data partition. I vaguely recall doing something like that, but it's been a long time since I used WinXP for any computer I spent that much time on [Edited on November 6, 2006 at 6:03 PM. Reason : you may also want to use part of the 40GB to back up the "documents" part of your large partition]
11/6/2006 6:02:48 PM
just go to properties for "my documents" and move it
11/6/2006 6:06:28 PM
not referring to "my documents" but the system folders named above, I believe something extra is required to relocate them ^^btw when I say temp data I mean output from video editing as well, streaming from one disk to another is generally faster than streaming back to the same disk[Edited on November 6, 2006 at 6:11 PM. Reason : *]
11/6/2006 6:08:36 PM