Mother
Aug 2003
 Bitter, miserable twat.
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Pagefile/drive organisation question
My "Windows bloat" has become too large and it's time to do an OS reinstall. (I'm going to be boring and reinstall Win XP 32bit; yes the x64 version would give a little boost with VirtualDub, AviSynth & Xvid but I'm worried about hardware compatibility. And I'd rather wait a while before I go Vista).
I've bought a new drive so I can reinstall without losing any data. In the past I haven't organised things very well; I currently have 2 drives with a single partition on each, the OS, pagefile, documents and settings, program files, etc. are all on C:.
I now have 3 physical drives:
1. 250GB SATA II (16MB Cache) - Full (Fastest?)
2. 160GB SATA II (2MB Cache) - Empty
3. 80GB ATA100 (8MB Cache) - Full (Slowest?)
This time I'm going to try and keep things organised. I've read up a bit about pagefile settings and found conflicting advice, so I'd appreciate thoughts from you PC geeks.
My plan is:
- Create a 2GB FAT32 partition at the front of drive 2 for the Windows pagefile. The remaining space is to be an NTFS partition, and the 80GB of archived storage currently on drive 3 is to be copied over.
- Reformat Drive 3, leave it as one big 80GB NTFS primary partition and install the OS here (some sites say you should have a pagefile on this partition as well). Installed software is to go on this drive, along with temporary storage of downloads.
- Use Drive 1 for the Documents and Settings folder (i.e. user profiles, documents, working files, email folders, desktop, favourites, temporary internet files etc.), basically the stuff that gets used the most. This drive holds the current OS install; if I delete the Windows and Program Files folders to free up a bit of space I should be able leave the current Documents and Settings folder alone and just carry out a defragment.
Any thoughts guys?
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