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| | #1 (permalink) |
| | Who changes my partition name? I use a dual boot and begin the installation immediately after the formating before the XP boot , the partition name in vista don't MATCH THOSE IN XP. for exmple ,if my XP is in the C patition and I install vista in E. The vista will call the partition where it is installed Partition C and the original C and D would be D and E etc. How can i change it ? |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| | Re: Who changes my partition name? You can't--it's too late now. Unless you want to start all over. The only (easy) way to keep your "C" XP boot letter assignment for a dual boot with Vista is to start the install of Vista within XP while it is running and carefully choosing the correct install options. If you start the Vista install by booting from the DVD, it will cannibalize the "C" boot letter as it's own, and push everything else one letter up. If you try to change the boot letter assignments now (from within Vista), you will have a mess. -- Maxwell Bluemeanie "william" <william@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:19B19991-D25B-4574-8921-97563190EC60@microsoft.com... >I use a dual boot and begin the installation > immediately after the formating before the XP boot , the partition > name in vista don't MATCH THOSE IN XP. for exmple ,if my XP is in the C > patition and I install vista in E. The vista will call the partition where > it > is installed Partition C and the original C and D would be D and E etc. > > How can i change it ? |
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| | #3 (permalink) |
| | Re: Who changes my partition name? It is the legacy DOS naming convention. You can't get around the system. You can install each operating system in a "primary" DOS partition. Then using a 3rd party boot manager program, you can hide the partition you are NOT booted into. Each operating system will boot up as partition/drive C:. The system you are NOT booted into will be hidden from the active operating system. All logical drives will be seen the same by both operating systems. I have four operating systems on my computer. Each operating system is seen as being on drive C: -- Regards, Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User (For email, remove the obvious from my address) Quote from George Ankner: If you knew as much as you think you know, You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew! "william" <william@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:19B19991-D25B-4574-8921-97563190EC60@microsoft.com... >I use a dual boot and begin the installation > immediately after the formating before the XP boot , the partition > name in vista don't MATCH THOSE IN XP. for exmple ,if my XP is in the C > patition and I install vista in E. The vista will call the partition where > it > is installed Partition C and the original C and D would be D and E etc. > > How can i change it ? |
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| | Re: Who changes my partition name? Where can I get "a 3rd party boot manager program" that will hide the partition that I don't want to boot to. I want to duel-boot with both of the operating systems seen as being on C drive. Thanks -- J6 "Richard Urban" wrote: > It is the legacy DOS naming convention. You can't get around the system. > > You can install each operating system in a "primary" DOS partition. > > Then using a 3rd party boot manager program, you can hide the partition you > are NOT booted into. > > Each operating system will boot up as partition/drive C:. > > The system you are NOT booted into will be hidden from the active operating > system. > > All logical drives will be seen the same by both operating systems. > > I have four operating systems on my computer. Each operating system is seen > as being on drive C: > > -- > > Regards, > > Richard Urban > Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User > (For email, remove the obvious from my address) > > Quote from George Ankner: > If you knew as much as you think you know, > You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew! > > "william" <william@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message > news:19B19991-D25B-4574-8921-97563190EC60@microsoft.com... > >I use a dual boot and begin the installation > > immediately after the formating before the XP boot , the partition > > name in vista don't MATCH THOSE IN XP. for exmple ,if my XP is in the C > > patition and I install vista in E. The vista will call the partition where > > it > > is installed Partition C and the original C and D would be D and E etc. > > > > How can i change it ? > > > |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| | Re: Who changes my partition name? "J6" <J6@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:612E8B34-3C25-4101-B63A-ACF49B2FA8A5@microsoft.com... > Where can I get "a 3rd party boot manager program" that will hide the > partition that I don't want to boot to. I want to duel-boot with both of > the > operating systems seen as being on C drive. Thanks Acronis OS selector. I use it to boot XP, Vista, Recovery Partition and Mac OSX on an IBM Thinkpad - absoloute doddle to setup and even worked flawlessly when I cloned my HD from an 80Gb to a 100GB. Rob > J6 > > > "Richard Urban" wrote: > >> It is the legacy DOS naming convention. You can't get around the system. >> >> You can install each operating system in a "primary" DOS partition. >> >> Then using a 3rd party boot manager program, you can hide the partition >> you >> are NOT booted into. >> >> Each operating system will boot up as partition/drive C:. >> >> The system you are NOT booted into will be hidden from the active >> operating >> system. >> >> All logical drives will be seen the same by both operating systems. >> >> I have four operating systems on my computer. Each operating system is >> seen >> as being on drive C: >> >> -- >> >> Regards, >> >> Richard Urban >> Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User >> (For email, remove the obvious from my address) >> >> Quote from George Ankner: >> If you knew as much as you think you know, >> You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew! >> >> "william" <william@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message >> news:19B19991-D25B-4574-8921-97563190EC60@microsoft.com... >> >I use a dual boot and begin the installation >> > immediately after the formating before the XP boot , the partition >> > name in vista don't MATCH THOSE IN XP. for exmple ,if my XP is in the C >> > patition and I install vista in E. The vista will call the partition >> > where >> > it >> > is installed Partition C and the original C and D would be D and E etc. >> > >> > How can i change it ? >> >> >> > |
My System Specs![]() |
| | #6 (permalink) |
| | Re: Who changes my partition name? I have been using System Commander for about ten years now. It has gone through about 4-5 upgrades since I first Started using it. -- Regards, Richard Urban Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User (For email, remove the obvious from my address) Quote from George Ankner: If you knew as much as you think you know, You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew! "J6" <J6@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:612E8B34-3C25-4101-B63A-ACF49B2FA8A5@microsoft.com... > Where can I get "a 3rd party boot manager program" that will hide the > partition that I don't want to boot to. I want to duel-boot with both of > the > operating systems seen as being on C drive. Thanks > -- > J6 > > > "Richard Urban" wrote: > >> It is the legacy DOS naming convention. You can't get around the system. >> >> You can install each operating system in a "primary" DOS partition. >> >> Then using a 3rd party boot manager program, you can hide the partition >> you >> are NOT booted into. >> >> Each operating system will boot up as partition/drive C:. >> >> The system you are NOT booted into will be hidden from the active >> operating >> system. >> >> All logical drives will be seen the same by both operating systems. >> >> I have four operating systems on my computer. Each operating system is >> seen >> as being on drive C: >> >> -- >> >> Regards, >> >> Richard Urban >> Microsoft MVP Windows Shell/User >> (For email, remove the obvious from my address) >> >> Quote from George Ankner: >> If you knew as much as you think you know, >> You would realize that you don't know what you thought you knew! >> >> "william" <william@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message >> news:19B19991-D25B-4574-8921-97563190EC60@microsoft.com... >> >I use a dual boot and begin the installation >> > immediately after the formating before the XP boot , the partition >> > name in vista don't MATCH THOSE IN XP. for exmple ,if my XP is in the C >> > patition and I install vista in E. The vista will call the partition >> > where >> > it >> > is installed Partition C and the original C and D would be D and E etc. >> > >> > How can i change it ? >> >> >> |
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| | #7 (permalink) |
| | Re: Who changes my partition name?/Try this. Hi William-- This is done by the bios and it's done when you run setup from restart rather than the XP desktop. For some hardware On a dual boot if you run the Vista setup from the XP desktop, your drive letters will not change. If you run the setup from a restart, then the bios will dictate and change your drive letters as you've seen. You also have noticed by now, I imagine, that when you are on the XP boot, that the letters are seen as before you dual booted, and on the Vista boot the new configuration is there. Why this happens may better be explained by someone else, but we know that it does. A few points and then a possible "fix" if you feel you need to. 1) You can access the XP desktop, and its files and folders from the Vista desktop by simply typing in the run box or a combination addressbar/run box that you make in your taskbar (by right clicking taskbar>toolbar>address>unlock>hold down left mouse and slide seam to the left to open it) C:\Documents and Settings [if C:\was the XP drive or whatever letter]\William's XP Profile\Desktop. This saves time and space because unless you want to copy files and folders from the XP desktop to the Vista desktop or from XP folder to Vista folder, (for convenience) you don't have to. 2) I've noticed that when I'm on the Vista desktop if I open a ***notepad from my XP boot via my shortcut, it will not let me save it and close until I rename it with my Vista pathway somewhere such as E:\Users\My Vista Profile\Documents or another folder besides documents 3) You can search here on System Restore or volsnap.sys and read the clever workaround that Michael from Chapel Hill, Colin Barnhorst, and Mark Vandenberg have explained well that Bit Locker encryption or other means of hiding the Vista drive from the XP drive confers protection for Vista restore points when you boot to XP. 4) It used not to be a factor because up until a few interim builds ago, specifically with 5472, I simply burned the ISO and the setup appeared on the XP desktop ready to rock and roll and the drive letters didn't change. When 5472 was released on July 17, 2006 10AM PDT, it gave me a false errror that I needed a new IDE controller to insall Vista (MSFT has this glitch; they know about it, and they have false information via the Update Advisor as well-- a lot of it on a lot of boxes that they don't want to fix because that might decrease the number of new computers they will push out by telling people they need them when they don't and it might cost them sales of OEM preloades). Every interim build since then from including 5728 and I'm sure on Friday 5743, has required my machines to run setup from a restart and changed the drive letter because running from the XP Desktop produces a false "setup cannot run because you need a new IDE controller error" and it runs perfectly from a restart. ***How you can *try to change the drive letters*** (Do A Complete Backup First/or At Least set a restore point) 1) Right clicking the drive in diskmanagement *will not work. Open your registry and find the key below. If the key does not already exist then create it. Within the main key create a new sub-key with a single letter representing the drive letter of the drive to be modified. (e.g. [HKEY...\DriveIcons\D]) Within the drive letter key create another sub-key called "DefaultIcon" (e.g. [HKEY...\DriveIcons\D\DefaultIcon]) and set the "(Default)" value to equal the fully qualified name of the icon file. If the file contains more that one icon follow it with a comma and the zero-based index of the icon (e.g. "c:\icons\myicons.dll,4"). Create another sub-key within the drive letter key called "DefaultLabel" (e.g. [HKEY...\DriveIcons\D\DefaultLabel]) and set it's "(Default)" value to equal the label for the drive letter (e.g. "My ZIP Drive"). For example: HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE Software Microsoft Windows CurrentVersion Explorer DriveIcons D DefaultIcon (Default) = c:\icons\myicons.dll,4 DefaultLabel (Default) = My ZIP Drive You may need to restart Windows for the change to take effect, or press F5 to refresh My Computer. Note: The "DefaultLabel" value only works with Windows 2000 and higher. Registry Settings System Key: [HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\ DriveIcons] Value Name: Default Data Type: REG_SZ (String Value) Good luck and hth, CH "william" <william@discussions.microsoft.com> wrote in message news:19B19991-D25B-4574-8921-97563190EC60@microsoft.com... >I use a dual boot and begin the installation > immediately after the formating before the XP boot , the partition > name in vista don't MATCH THOSE IN XP. for exmple ,if my XP is in the C > patition and I install vista in E. The vista will call the partition where > it > is installed Partition C and the original C and D would be D and E etc. > > How can i change it ? |
My System Specs![]() |
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