I still don't know how to describe it properly... This time I'm trying
to describe the workaround or quasi-fix. After tweaking it for a while,
my hypothesis was that gparted was looking for some information about
the bad clusters which had never been created on the NTFS partition (or
somewhere else?). My theory was that the Windows hard disk utilities
might be able to create the required information, but after that it gets
really fuzzy in a bunch of mysterious Japanese explanations that I
couldn't fully follow. Basically I used the disk checker from inside of
Windows. At first it wouldn't do anything useful, but when I tweaked one
of the few settings it gave me a warning and seed to do something more.
That still wasn't enough to satisfy gparted, but some more reboots
triggered the non-Windows checkdisk function, and after that it appears
that gparted was at least able to find the bad cluster information.

At this point I was mostly working with the latest bootable gparted CD,
but that one was still unable to resize the NTFS partition for some
reason. However, I used the version of gparted on the Hardy Heron CD,
and that was finally able to do it.

P.S. There was still some residual nastiness... I'll give the outline in
case someone else in a similar boat winds up here... The swap partition
had used up my last primary. To make the extended partition I had to
unmount the swap partition that the Hardy Heron bootable CD was using,
destroy the swap partition, shuffle things around, create an extended
partition, and then recreate the swap partition and install Hardy Heron.
However, at that point the original Gutsy Gibbon partition had an fstab
file that referred to a non-existent swap partition, so I had to
manually edit that file to add the swap information from the new Hardy
Heron fstab. So far everything seems to be working properly.

P.P.S. About the ultimate cause, I suspect that it was some kind of non-
standard optimization by the Sharp people. This machine has a number of
peculiarities that cause problems with Ubuntu. The most annoying is that
the network adapter still doesn't initialize properly, even in Hardy
Heron. Each time I boot, I have to right click on the network and
unselect "Enable Networking", and then do it again and select it as
enabled, and after about 10 seconds it will connect to the network.
There's also a problem with the display driver that freezes it once in a
while in Gutsy, but I haven't used Heron enough to know if that bug has
been fixed.

-- 
Gparted can't resize NTFS
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/222931
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