On Sat, 2002-12-21 at 05:42, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> You could leave the partition as NTFS, but you would only be able to read data off
>of the NTFS partitions. If you wanted to share files, both Read and Write, then you
>would either create a FAT32 partition, or I do believe there are some N
efano Pogliani
Sent: Friday, December 20, 2002 9:54 AM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [newbie] Mandrake 9 on my notebook
Thanks !
/Stefano
Anne Wilson wrote:
>On Friday 20 Dec 2002 5:08 pm, Stefano Pogliani wrote:
>
>
>>Do you mean that if I have a single "C Disk" on W2K,
--- Carroll Grigsby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dan:
> lnx4win? I thought this died when 8.0 was released. It was aimed at
> Windows users who wanted to experiment with Linux without
> experiencing the thrill of repartitioning, and it was never
> intended to be anything except a tool for experim
On Thursday 19 December 2002 01:12 pm, Belkie, Dan wrote:
> Hey guys!
> I am looking at installing Mandrake 9 on my notebook. I am running win2000
> and have over 20 GIG free on my d drive.
> Should it be pretty easy, without harming my 2000 install? Would this be
> the correct steps?
> Insert the
On Thursday 19 December 2002 18:12, Belkie, Dan wrote:
> Hey guys!
> I am looking at installing Mandrake 9 on my notebook. I am running win2000
> and have over 20 GIG free on my d drive.
> Should it be pretty easy, without harming my 2000 install? Would this be
> the correct steps?
> Insert the fir
I will assume that installing Mandrake 9 and Win2K is the same as with
WinXP.
I also have a notebook, 2 partitions (20 and 10 Gb), the first one for
XP alone and the second one with 3 logicalo drives: a 1 Gb FAT drive,
and the rest for MDK9 (8.75 for EXT2 on / and 256Mb for SWAP)
After installing