Most of you may know about this already, but avoid the newer Dells if you plan on installing a new OS or re-partitioning your hard drive.
My friend recently bought a P4 1.7Ghz Dell machine (it costed him like 4 grand). Unfortunately it came preloaded with Win ME. It also came with a 60 GB HD, which of course was partitioned into one huge 60 GB C partition. I told him that partitioning drives is a good idea especially if you ever plan on reinstalling the OS since you can just dedicate an easy-to-format partition for it.
So I get him on the phone and walk him through doing everything in fdisk. He tells me that fdisk only allows him to allocate 57GB of the drive. I said "oh thats just the way the system partitions the drive...you never get the full spec of the HD". I had no idea how wrong I was.
So everything's going fine, he makes 3 partitions, everything's great. He starts installing Win98 and we get off the phone. Later that night he reports the system is running fine.
Then the next day, the whole thing crashes and refuses to boot. He calls up Dell and they tell him that there's a safety measure in all new Dells that puts a "ghost partition" on all drives to prevent customers from repartitioning and reformatting. Basically his whole computer is hosed. Luckily, Dell sent him a totally new machine.
Sorry for the long story, but I hadn't read anything about this on the message board. I assumed doing a low level format would get around it. Anyone else run into this problem?
My friend recently bought a P4 1.7Ghz Dell machine (it costed him like 4 grand). Unfortunately it came preloaded with Win ME. It also came with a 60 GB HD, which of course was partitioned into one huge 60 GB C partition. I told him that partitioning drives is a good idea especially if you ever plan on reinstalling the OS since you can just dedicate an easy-to-format partition for it.
So I get him on the phone and walk him through doing everything in fdisk. He tells me that fdisk only allows him to allocate 57GB of the drive. I said "oh thats just the way the system partitions the drive...you never get the full spec of the HD". I had no idea how wrong I was.
So everything's going fine, he makes 3 partitions, everything's great. He starts installing Win98 and we get off the phone. Later that night he reports the system is running fine.
Then the next day, the whole thing crashes and refuses to boot. He calls up Dell and they tell him that there's a safety measure in all new Dells that puts a "ghost partition" on all drives to prevent customers from repartitioning and reformatting. Basically his whole computer is hosed. Luckily, Dell sent him a totally new machine.
Sorry for the long story, but I hadn't read anything about this on the message board. I assumed doing a low level format would get around it. Anyone else run into this problem?