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Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Windows. Show all posts

Friday, December 21, 2012

Tips and Recommendations for Resizing Windows Partitions

A friend recently asked me how to go about resizing some partitions in Windows 7. He wanted to know how to do it with Windows Disk Management. I included a link in this post to a How-To for that. Of course, Windows built-in tools are not always the best or most functional for performing certain tasks. Therefore, I wrote the following to help him choose some free third-party tools to accomplish the job.

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Paragon makes some good tools and has free versions. You can use "Backup and Recovery 2012" to make an image of your hard disks for backup purposes. Then use "Partition Manager" to resize your partitions.

http://www.paragon-software.com/free/

"Macrium Reflect" is what I usually use to clone my hard drives similar to "Backup and Recovery 2012" above.

http://www.macrium.com/reflectfree.aspx

Built-in Windows support for resizing partitions exists in Vista and 7. Use another product to back up your partitions first just to make sure.

http://www.howtogeek.com/howto/windows-vista/resize-a-partition-for-free-in-windows-vista/

"Gnome Partition Manager Live" is a bootable CD that you can use to resize, create and move partitions as well. I often use this bootable disk to adjust partition size, or repartition hard drives.

http://gparted.sourceforge.net/livecd.php

Whatever you choose, you should do a thorough disk defragmentation before resizing. If personal data or system files are occupying non-contiguous space, it will prevent you from resizing past that file fragment.  To do a thorough defrag, choose one of the below programs, defrag with free space consolidation if possible, then tell it to do a boot-time defrag, then reboot. When the system is coming back up, it will defrag before the operating system has time to lock system files. Two that I highly recommend are Auslogics and Smart Defrag 2.

http://www.auslogics.com/en/software/disk-defrag/

http://www.iobit.com/iobitsmartdefrag.html

Just pay attention when you install any of these programs, as many reputable, good companies will offer to install additional software like toolbars and such as you are going through the installation. You don't have to worry about it with the Gnome Partition Editor since it's open source, but most of the other companies probably include those things in the installer. You should be able to opt-out.

Good luck. Have fun. If you made a backup like I suggested, you have nothing to fear.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Connecting to Box.net With NetDrive

Here is quick post describing how to connect to Box.net (box.com now) using an application called NetDrive. This is the process I used for Windows XP, though it should work for Windows 7 as well. You can download the application from here: http://netdrive.net/

Of course it goes without saying that you need to sign up for a Box.net account if you don't already have one. You can sign up for an account here: http://box.com

There are a few tutorials on connecting your Box.net account as a drive in Windows. Here are some examples:

http://techie-buzz.com/tech-news/mount-boxnet-account-in-windows-explorer.html

http://smallvoid.com/article/winnt-webdav-network-drive.html

I have had trouble trying to use the Windows WebDav implementation on XP, so this application was a breath of fresh air. It is very straightforward, though there is a gotcha that I haven't seen documented on any other site. So here are the steps:


  1. Download and install NetDrive
  2. Open the application
  3. Create a "New Folder" under Site
  4. Select your new folder
  5. Click "New Site" and fill in the information on the right side of the screen
  6. I named mine "Box.net" (I know, not very original)
  7. For the site URL, use: "https://www.box.com/dav" (notice the https prefix, and the .com instead of .net)
  8. Enter port 443
  9. Select "Server Type" as "WebDav"
  10. Choose a drive letter for your mount point
  11. Enter your "Account" login ID
  12. Enter your "Password" using your Box.net password
  13. Select your "Automatic login..." preferences
  14. Click "Save"
Now you are almost done. Here is the secret sauce that makes this work:

  1. Select the "Site" you just created
  2. Click on the "Advanced" button
  3. Set your "Encoding" to UTF-8
  4. Click the "Use HTTPS" checkbox
  5. Enter 443 for the "Host : Port" (if it's not already filled in)
  6. Enter your login information again (if it's not already filled in)
That is it! Now you can mount your Box.net cloud drive whenever you like. I find the performance better than other methods as well (ie - I set it up using Windows 7 native WebDav - WebFolders - support). You can now access your cloud drive any time you like.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Operating System Humor

Windows, Mac, and Linux go to the restroom and do their business. Windows washes his hands with just a little soap, and dries them with a small piece of towel. He says, Windows has to conserve system resources.

Mac washes his hands with lots of soap and water, and dries them with a long stretch of paper towel. He says, Macs are extravagant.

Linux walks over to the door and says, I don't make a mess all over myself ...

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