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January 7, 2008 12:01 AM PST

Save time, stay safe by partitioning your hard drive

by Dennis O'Reilly

Why would anyone start futzing with their PC if the machine is working OK? Two reasons: to make it safer and to make it faster. Dividing your hard drive into multiple partitions accomplishes both. By separating your applications and data from Windows' system files, you speed your backups and protect your files and programs from being wiped out if Windows conks out.

Windows Vista lets you create new partitions (which it calls "volumes") quickly and simply via the Disk Management utility. Unfortunately, the only quick and simple way to partition a hard drive in XP is to use a third-party partitioning program such as Symantec's $70 Norton PartitionMagic or Acronis's $50 Disk Director. A free alternative is Andy McLaughlin's Partition Logic.

To create new drive volumes in Vista, press the Windows key, type diskmgmt.msc, and press Enter to open the Disk management utility. Right-click one of the existing volumes and choose Shrink Volume. A window opens showing the amount of space in the volume, and the amount available for a new partition. The next field in the dialog box lets you choose how much space to allot to the new volume. The last field indicates the size of the original volume after the shrink.

Windows Vista's Disk Management utility

Right-click a volume in Vista's Disk Management utility and choose Shrink Volume to create a new volume for your applications and data.

After you select the volume size, click Shrink. Now right-click the new volume and choose New Simple Volume. Step through the wizard to select the volume size and its drive-letter designation, which Vista assigns automatically based on the letters currently being used. If you expect to add new storage devices, select a letter further down the alphabet to avoid potential conflicts in the future. You'll also select the file system to use (I recommend NTFS, unless you want to use the volume for older apps), and give it a name.

When you've made your selections, you'll see a summary of your choices. If you're happy with them, click Finish to begin formatting the volume. When the formatting is complete, an Explorer window will open with the volume selected. Relocate your favorite programs and data files to this volume, and set your backup program to duplicate this volume rather than the main (likely C:) drive, which holds all of your system files, which change much less frequently. Of course, you'll still want to back up your entire system three or four times a year--or more or less frequently, depending on how much confidence you have in your PC's stability.

A note on repartitioning XP
I have an ancient laptop whose battery gave up the ghost months ago, so it works only when plugged in. For no apparent reason, I decided to repartition the machine's drive following Microsoft's instructions for doing so in Windows XP, which entails a complete reinstallation of the operating system. I'm happy to report that I succeeded in creating two 15GB partitions on the notebook's 30GB drive during the reinstallation, and the machine is working relatively well.

All it took was about six hours of my time: about an hour for the initial OS installation, and five more to download and install the 100 or so updates XP required. I counted eight restarts during the process: every time I thought I was done and returned to the Windows Update site just to make sure, I was hit with more "required" updates (getting IE7 on the system took about an hour and a couple of restarts all by itself). Much easier to go with a third-party disk-partitioning utility, I think, but an interesting academic exercise just the same.

Tomorrow: Convert a Word document into a Powerpoint presentation.

Dennis O'Reilly has covered PCs and other technologies in print and online since 1985. Along with more than a decade as editor for Ziff-Davis's Computer Select, Dennis edited PC World's award-winning Here's How section for more than seven years. He is a member of the CNET blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) (6 Comments)
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by basraw January 7, 2008 8:22 AM PST
I gave up partitioning drives when I realized Windows is a space hog and every system program wants to install on c:\ - it fills up freaking fast.

Of course, when you have 3 TB of drive space, 200 gigs volume is small!
Reply to this comment
by protagonistic January 7, 2008 10:06 AM PST
I can't believe anyone would give this kind of advice in this day of cheap storage. Partitioning your C drive is just plain bad advice. You need a second drive on your system. I have seen too many cases where the C drive has gone bad and people were faced with losing all their data or spending a huge sum of money to recover it.

People take the easy way out and rarely back up properly. In that case putting everything on one drive just compounds the stupidity. Data should be on a separate drive and then it should be backed up to removable storage.
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by doreilly January 7, 2008 2:54 PM PST
Repartitioning your primary drive is much simpler and cheaper than buying and installing a second hard drive. I agree that backing up to removable storage a couple of times a year is best, but for interim backups, a second partition is a faster and simpler solution.
by ricfax January 10, 2009 8:37 AM PST
Adding a second drive might make sense for desktops. It just isn't an option on most laptops which only have space for one hard drive. Repartitioning is the only way to gain the advantages of multiple drives on most laptops.
by j_ashtiani January 27, 2008 12:21 PM PST
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by j_ashtiani January 27, 2008 12:25 PM PST
l always get my softwares download from cent web
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About Workers' Edge

Dennis O'Reilly has covered PCs and other technologies in print and online since 1985. Along with more than a decade as editor for Ziff-Davis's Computer Select, Dennis edited PC World's award-winning Here's How section for more than seven years. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET.

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