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Aug 22 2007, 07:09 PM
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#1
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Newbie [ Level 2 ] Group: Members Posts: 12 Joined: 17-August 07 From: Canada Member No.: 24,159 |
Many of us, during the course of computer's life will need to reformat our computer for various reasons. Whether it be your computer is so slow and you just can't figure out why, or if you have a very persistent virus that you just can't figure out a way to eradicate. Though i'm sure there are countless number of reasons, many will fall on the solution of reformatting your computer....or more specifically, your hard-drive. Now what exactly does this involve? To put it simply, reformatting your hard-drive is like reformatting any other disk like a floppy disk or a usb drive. It will cause the drive/disk to be completely erased and for the most part, completely fresh to be used again. The only exception to this is when the disk has some physical damage.....nothing can fix this. The main difference when reformatting your hard-drive is your operating system is installed on it, and when you erase your os, you will have nothing to boot up to.
What will you need? - some-way to back up your data What do you do?
Congratulations, You're Done! |
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Aug 23 2007, 01:05 AM
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#2
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Administrator Group: Admin Posts: 467 Joined: 26-August 04 Member No.: 1 myCENTs:85.82 |
I reformatted your post :-) Nice tutorial..
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Aug 23 2007, 03:01 AM
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#3
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Colonel Panic Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 2,890 Joined: 25-March 05 From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada Member No.: 3,233 myCENTs:37.19 |
Nice tutorial, but I don't think a lot of members here need it since it's such a basic task
xboxrulz |
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Aug 23 2007, 07:55 AM
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#4
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Newbie [ Level 1 ] Group: Members Posts: 7 Joined: 22-August 07 Member No.: 24,272 |
Thats a nice tutorial, i wish i had that when i first re-formatted a computer (remembers and shivers)
i remember my backup drives didnt copy properly, then there was the bit where i had NO idea which commands to put in and was just guessing to get the windows disk to startup ^^ i did it by deleting first with a floppy then reinstalling, the long way round i know, but it was my first time |
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Aug 23 2007, 01:41 PM
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#5
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Way Out Of Control - You need a life :) Group: Members Posts: 1,086 Joined: 21-June 05 From: New York Member No.: 6,440 myCENTs:86.41 |
Nice and easy to follow tutorial mist
That letter to press after you delete the partition is L to confirm the deletion A side tip. If anyone plans to create more than one partition, now is the time to do it. Once Windows is installed, you will need a third party program like Partition Magic to split up the partition. A partition is just a separate section made available for data (be it files or the Operating System) storage. This is when you see more drives in My Computer where you can store your files to it instead of using C: all the time. FAT32 does have its advantages. Most games should work with NTFS, but older games may still require FAT32. |
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Aug 23 2007, 02:13 PM
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#6
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Colonel Panic Group: [MODERATOR] Posts: 2,890 Joined: 25-March 05 From: Toronto, Ontario, Canada Member No.: 3,233 myCENTs:37.19 |
I have yet had any games that require FAT32 because shouldn't Windows handle all the I/O requests, and not the game?
xboxrulz |
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Aug 24 2007, 02:24 AM
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#7
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Teh Coder Group: Members Posts: 1,053 Joined: 18-April 06 From: Australia Member No.: 12,833 myCENTs:89.25 |
Very nice tutorial, and a good idea to have it up here for all to refer to.
I have had to do this task considerably over the years, though I do often get stuck with bits and bobs as I forget (as the span of doing this is often months in difference), so it is very useful to have somewhere to refer too. |
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Aug 24 2007, 07:54 AM
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#8
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Premium Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 438 Joined: 28-January 06 Member No.: 10,925 |
Nice tutorial, very clear on what to do. Should help a number of guys that are up for their first format or very rarely do it.
Just make sure that all data is backed up properly, double check it. The number of people that have corrupted backups and cd's burnt onto faulty discs etc is amazing - check your stuff before you proceed with the format, or else you might lose everything. -HellFire |
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Aug 24 2007, 02:11 PM
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#9
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Teh Coder Group: Members Posts: 1,053 Joined: 18-April 06 From: Australia Member No.: 12,833 myCENTs:89.25 |
Nice tutorial, very clear on what to do. Should help a number of guys that are up for their first format or very rarely do it. Just make sure that all data is backed up properly, double check it. The number of people that have corrupted backups and cd's burnt onto faulty discs etc is amazing - check your stuff before you proceed with the format, or else you might lose everything. -HellFire I cannot begin to stress just how important the above is, about making damn sure any back-ups, especially vital ones are to be in perfect working order. I have burned off back-ups in the past, just nice and fast, not paying too much attention to it all in a rush and not verifying the disc or medium is in working order, only to need it later down the road and the darn thing can't access anything :|, also be vary wary of cheap cd's/dvd's. |
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Aug 24 2007, 03:20 PM
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#10
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Premium Member Group: [HOSTED] Posts: 393 Joined: 9-March 07 From: Tucson, AZ Member No.: 20,794 |
I have yet had any games that require FAT32 because shouldn't Windows handle all the I/O requests, and not the game? xboxrulz Yep. Windows handles all File I/O requests. The advantage to NTFS in gaming is compression. When you load large texture files off the disk, the CPU is just idling while the disk is thrashing to get the data into RAM...if you turn on compression on the game folder, you offload a little bit of that strain onto the CPU which had nothing to do, previously. This is only a bright idea if you have a very fast machine...especially in an SMP setup, since most games load routines really aren't multithreaded anyway. |
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