Thanks for all the help everyone. I hope i can do it and if so you'll get to see my pic here.HisDivineShadow said:A good program to use if you don't want to spend money is Imageforge, a free image editor available here: http://www.cursorarts.com/ca_imw_d.html
Or, if you have Windows (I believe XP is the only one that has this,), right click on the image you want to resize, go to "Open With," and choose Microsoft Photo Editor. It is a very easy program to use, especially for resizing.
HisDivineShadow said:A good program to use if you don't want to spend money is Imageforge, a free image editor available here: http://www.cursorarts.com/ca_imw_d.html
Or, if you have Windows (I believe XP is the only one that has this,), right click on the image you want to resize, go to "Open With," and choose Microsoft Photo Editor. It is a very easy program to use, especially for resizing.
HisDivineShadow said:Re-enabling? What exactly do you mean? What wrong with the drive exactly?
HisDivineShadow said:Ah, so you have a Serial ATA RAID it appears. Well, if you can hook it up to another computer and delete the files, that would be easiest HOWEVER, since your computer is pointed to the 80 GB hard drive when booting up, it will ignore the duplicates and only use the ones from the 80 GB drive. With almost 95% certainty, I can say that having the other files on your old drive will not matter UNLESS you switch the boot device in system setup. But, since you are making it a slave, it will not boot from it. You will and SHOULD delete the redundant files once you start it up and get the OS running, but for the boot up itself, the computer should be fine.
Dule said:I finally got it to work, thanks everyone...
p.s. these are my wife's toes..
Kalamos said:Well, add/remove should be registry dependant...
So, as long as you boot from a boot disk or a clean install, no system files on the slave disk should give you problem.
UNLESS you have something in your present registry pointing to files on the same partition the slave would now occupy.
Of course you could boot from a partition-manager disk. Such as MaxBlast for maxtor hds. You could just plug in both hds as primary and secondary masters [not sure on this: don't know scsi tech at all] and then copy the secondary partition over an empty primary partition.
If you just installed your OS you should have space to spare.
Then you could just unplug the old hd, boot from the new, clean up the copied partition deleting [or simply renaming] redundant or old system files, plug in the old hd once again [ok, bothersome but just to be sure...] and copy back your media files to the formatted hd.
I have four hds I juggle around when I need to fix or test things out.
An older 20 gigs is my boot and game disk - 1 small fat 16 partition and one large 32.
An 80 gigs makes up my OS and media disk [I have boot files and OS on different HDs so I can boot up even in case of OS failure]
And I have a backup 20 gigs in case I mess up my win partition on the 80 gigs.
I know its sounds messy, but I used to have many more, and it's really useful. Especially when you run scandisk or defrag and you have to do it on one 20 gigs partition instead of a whole 80 gigs hd...
Reg's!
HisDivineShadow said:lol, server scares. After reading that, I concur, disable the 80 and plug in the 36. While it may boot up normally with both in, I'm honestly not sure what the Add/Remove Programs will show. 😛 As to the wire plug in....I am not sure, as I have not seen your system and drives. Hopefully, only one socket will fit. As to the jumper, probably, but it depends on your system configs. In other words, check 'da manual. Hopefully there is a good diagram within it.
Perplexed...?? Yes...to say the least...!! ...would do that to me as well...!!HisDivineShadow said:That is truely bizzare. Yes, it is possible the magnetism of the screw driver messed with the hard drive, being a magnetic storage device, but if it did, why only affect the MP3s? Why not other files? This perplexes me....