G
Guest
In an earlier thread:
http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/co...316A51ED0C31&lang=en&cr=US&sloc=en-us&m=1&p=1
it was discussed the impact of drive letter swapping when using a dual boot
configuration. I tried the following With RC1:
1) In XP create a link on drive e: to a file folder on drive c:
2) Change to Vista (which is on drive d: in the XP reference system)
3) Click on the link. This works fine and the folder on the drive now called
d: opens properly
4) Look at the link properties which in Vista still shows c:\Test_C and
causes an error message saying illegal link when trying to move between the
tabs.
5) Change the link to d:\Test_C in Vista and Vista is happy
6) Go back to XP and click on the link, works fine
7) Check the link which still shows c:\Test_C
8) Back to Vista and the link still works but is back to c:\Test C and the
error message appears again.
Obviously there is more than just the drive letter info in the link but it
seems that XP has priority in naming the drive letter. Maybe it could be a
good idea to try to do the same but creating the link in Vista to see if
Vista has priority
http://windowshelp.microsoft.com/co...316A51ED0C31&lang=en&cr=US&sloc=en-us&m=1&p=1
it was discussed the impact of drive letter swapping when using a dual boot
configuration. I tried the following With RC1:
1) In XP create a link on drive e: to a file folder on drive c:
2) Change to Vista (which is on drive d: in the XP reference system)
3) Click on the link. This works fine and the folder on the drive now called
d: opens properly
4) Look at the link properties which in Vista still shows c:\Test_C and
causes an error message saying illegal link when trying to move between the
tabs.
5) Change the link to d:\Test_C in Vista and Vista is happy
6) Go back to XP and click on the link, works fine
7) Check the link which still shows c:\Test_C
8) Back to Vista and the link still works but is back to c:\Test C and the
error message appears again.
Obviously there is more than just the drive letter info in the link but it
seems that XP has priority in naming the drive letter. Maybe it could be a
good idea to try to do the same but creating the link in Vista to see if
Vista has priority