On Sun, 29 Dec 2019 07:55:22 -0500 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote: > On Saturday, December 28, 2019 03:46:53 PM Doug McGarrett wrote: > > I bought a new computer last summer, and it came with Windows 10 on > > FOUR partitions! I shrank the Windows partition 4 to 100 GiB to > > allow a minimum Windows system for anything that won't run on > > OpenSUSE TW, and made a new partition for Linux, using a disk for > > GParted. Works fine. > > Interesting, I'm wondering about the logic behind that -- was that an > effort to segregate the user's "real" data (photos, videos, email, > ...) on a separate partition?
No, MS has never done that. The Users directory is always part of the system tree. If Windows breaks badly, or gets a virus, you reinstall it. It's your responsibility to have backed up anything you want to keep. > > Which manufacturer? What is on /dev/sda3 and /dev/sda4? (Are > /dev/sda1 and /dev/sda2 as described in the original email (Windows > and Windows recovery partitions)? > > I don't remember the correct terminology, but is the partioning done > under whe old scheme (where there can be up to 4 primary partitions > or 3 primary partions and then (hmm, iirc, up to 12?) extended > partitions "under" /dev/sda, or under the new scheme (which I don't > remember enough about to describe -- I vaguely think a lot more > partitions and all of them primary?)? > I'd guess C:, Recovery, EFI and a small 'Microsoft Reserved Partition'. The MS Disk Administrator does not show this reserved partition, but GParted does. My Windows 10 machine is an Acer Aspire netbook (which, by the way, came fitted with a drive too small to do the inevitable set of updates after first boot). Partitions will be GPT now. -- Joe