is there a way for me to combine my 140gb, 160gb, and 200gb drive into 2 "drives" C: and D:C: being my Windows system and program files and D: being everything else
5/24/2008 4:57:52 PM
Yeah it's called a spanned volume.[Edited on May 24, 2008 at 5:16 PM. Reason : http://technet2.microsoft.com/windowsserver/en/library/efdfa6aa-4077-45c7-a24c-894df9102b6a1033.mspx]
5/24/2008 5:16:20 PM
ughdynamic disks ftlif you ever convert your shit to a dynamic disk, kiss it goodbye if anything ever happens to your computermy advice: go get a cheap IDE raid card. you can get one for like $30 on newegg i think.
5/24/2008 5:22:08 PM
thanks, got it done very quicklyalso dont worry evan i have a 750gb external doing backup
5/24/2008 5:34:34 PM
5/24/2008 6:14:18 PM
You guys know there are recovery tools for dynamic discs too right?
5/24/2008 7:47:30 PM
oh yes, believe me, i knowif they worked, they'd be great
5/24/2008 7:53:27 PM
you're better off just not using them, period
5/24/2008 8:40:48 PM
i didnt convert them to dynamic disks btw, i just mapped the drive onto another drive (idk?)either way, Drives F: and G: are now just folders inside Drive H:
5/24/2008 9:47:58 PM
^well yeah, that works.. you're not technically "combining" space, however.<!---[Edited on May 24, 2008 at 9:55 PM. Reason : --></]
5/24/2008 9:54:53 PM
JBOD
5/25/2008 12:38:55 AM
using dynamic disks is about as smart a move as using the motherboard's onboard raid controller.
5/25/2008 1:21:27 AM
^Truth ... sadly. Great idea, poor implementation.I understand the complexities involved, but just seems like it shouldn't be so difficult to make a proper standard for a universal RAID and/or Dynamic Disk system regardless of hardware or OS.But what do I know.
5/25/2008 3:41:21 AM
you don't need to use dynamic disks. you can mount one drive as a dir inside the one of the other drives
5/25/2008 12:14:57 PM