A Andre Da Costa [Extended64] Jun 9, 2006 #2 You can't uninstall it, you have to format the drive or partition it is installed on. No one's stopping you, its your decision. -- -- Andre Windows Connected | http://www.windowsconnected.com Extended64 | http://www.extended64.com Blog | http://www.extended64.com/blogs/andre http://spaces.msn.com/members/adacosta
You can't uninstall it, you have to format the drive or partition it is installed on. No one's stopping you, its your decision. -- -- Andre Windows Connected | http://www.windowsconnected.com Extended64 | http://www.extended64.com Blog | http://www.extended64.com/blogs/andre http://spaces.msn.com/members/adacosta
J John Barnes Sep 16, 2006 #4 If you made an image file, restore that, being sure to have it restore the MBR. If not then you would boot to your XP cd and do an install, formatting the drive you are going to install it on.
If you made an image file, restore that, being sure to have it restore the MBR. If not then you would boot to your XP cd and do an install, formatting the drive you are going to install it on.
D deebs Sep 16, 2006 #5 Two drives (as a minimum) seems the minimum spec in my opinion. One drive for OS and programs One drive for user data. For more than one OS then three drives seems a good solution
Two drives (as a minimum) seems the minimum spec in my opinion. One drive for OS and programs One drive for user data. For more than one OS then three drives seems a good solution