View Full Version : Multiple OS's
SXRguyinMA
03-26-2009, 02:53 PM
Ok, I'm going to be redoing my hard drive soon, and figured I'd partition it after a fresh reformatting to run XP, Vista and W7. Now, if I do all these I've got a few Q's
1. How much space should I allocate for each?
2. Which order should I install them in?
3. Once W7 expires, can I merge that partition with either the XP or Vista partition without reformatting again?
Thanks :bowdown:
Luke122
03-26-2009, 02:56 PM
I would go for Vista first, then either one next. Give at least 20gb each for apps + updates, and have one large partition to store media and files that will be accessed by all OS's.
xRyokenx
03-26-2009, 05:02 PM
You might want ~50GB for Vista as it's a really bloated OS. I gave it 35GB and it was not happy with me at all.
SXRguyinMA
03-26-2009, 05:06 PM
thanks for the tips :up:
I would go for Vista first, ......
NO NO NO no no NO
You should install them in this order:
XP,
Vista,
Windows 7.
XP won't see the vista boot loader info or windows 7 bootloader info, and vista won't see windows 7's boot info, you should always install oldest to newest.
nevermind1534
03-29-2009, 01:42 PM
I thought Vista and 7 used the same bootloader. But xp definitely has to be installed first. You generally want to install the oldest first and the newest last.
TheMainMan
03-29-2009, 02:00 PM
Just confirming what XcOM and nevermind1534 said on this one. This is my current OS configuration with XP and Vista on one drive and 7 on another. My 64-bit Vista install was around 14GBs so give Vista plenty of space, same goes for 7. Luke122's suggestion for a seperate partition for storage is critical because Vista and 7 don't like accessing files from another OS' documents folder without editing permissions. It won't cause problems (at least it hasn't for me) but it takes a while if you have a lot of files. A seperate drive or partition means you can point all the OSes there for your documents and they don't need to go into each others file permissions.
Anyways, enjoy 7!
EspoNation
03-30-2009, 10:32 AM
merging the partitions no. but you can just delete the W7 stuff from the the 3rd partition and as said about use it for storage. if you wanted to use linux i know Ubuntu self alocates space with what is remaining on the drive.
Luke122
03-30-2009, 11:17 AM
NO NO NO no no NO
You should install them in this order:
XP,
Vista,
Windows 7.
XP won't see the vista boot loader info or windows 7 bootloader info, and vista won't see windows 7's boot info, you should always install oldest to newest.
Worked for me.. I did Vista Biz, XP Pro, and Ubuntu, in that order.
xRyokenx
03-30-2009, 11:17 AM
I also recommend a separate partition for storage and maybe even one for games as well, unless you want the two together. And what you can do is just make shortcuts in My Documents so that you don't have to click all over to get to your stuff.
just a heads up on the game thingie.. even though you install xp on one drive, and 7 on another and games on a third you can acces the games but your savegames will be stored deep within the heart of you current running install:) so you will have to copy game date everytime you play something. so keep games on on install.
SXRguyinMA
03-30-2009, 03:37 PM
thanks for the info.
on another topic, I used gparted live to partition my drive, left 80GB for vista and 80GB for w7. I installed vista ultimate 32-bit, everything works fine. I installed w7, but it wont fully install. seems theres an issue with its resolution. I had this happen before as well.
it installed fine, but after the last reboot, one monitor says "out of range" and the other says "cannot display this resolution. Well I went back in with gparted and erased the w7 partition, but it still shows up on my boot menu. how do I get rid of it? thanks
TheMainMan
03-31-2009, 02:29 AM
My personal preference for editing the Vista bootloader is EasyBCD from NeoSmart as it is very simple to use and allows you to conveniently edit everything in one place. It will also allow you to delete an entry quite easily.
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