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- 13 Aug 2005
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- 73
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I have no idea about LinuxWhich you or anyone else will probably never notice in real terms.why partition? firstly there IS a fairly big difference in read speed from inside to outside of a platter. it reads outside first, so first files will be fastest. If your drive has 300gigs of films on it then you install a game, the game will be on a slower part of the disk.
Which you or anyone else will probably never notice in real terms.Smack on 100gig for windows, 100gig for games and 300gig partition for the rest. music/films/backup work files don't need the best read speed, windows, page file and games will benefit from being on the faster part of the drive.
Biggest reason to partition? windows gets virus or goes **** up, you can during install format the windows partition easily , reinstall and not have lost any of your other files. Sure a dead hard drive would take it all, but it would in any setup. But most of the time a hosed windows install will only screw up its own partition and reinstalling or formatting that partition is 100 times easier when you separate windows. You can get fancy and try and make a windows folder very accurate on space. But i tend to just give it plenty of space and install most of the random non game programs in there and also keep it defragged and download to it, then move stuff i download to the slow partition, helps keep downloaded stuff nice and together as it can download in bits and be fragmented, be moved to another partition in one large defragmented lump and then windows partition is clean again once thats deleted.
Some truth in that.
Some truth in that as wellFrankly because hard drives are cheap and big the actual sizes you choose aren't so important, just as long as you have enough space on windows and games, worst comes to worst, you run out and install stuff to the other partitions, won't be any worse off than if it was all installed in one partition anyway.
Haven't used linux in ages but it used to be that FAT32 or that "other" file system was best to format with if you were wanting to access that partition from both windows and linux, ntfs was not good for linux access to a partition IIRC. Thats most likely changed though, was quite a while ago.

I have 3 HDs atm. 1 has Vista on, 1 has XP on, and the third has all my downloads on, drivers, MP3 etc. I also have an external HD or 2 which I backup to. I also Image the C: drive occasionally,must admit not as often as I should.
I see no reason to partition my C: drive, just makes life complicated.
I also used to put my swapdrive on a different drive,but, saw no speed increase whatsoever. But, I have always had a load of ram and a fast CPU.
But of course that's my opinion.
