20 G harddrives only show 2 gig

G

Guest

Bought computer with XP Home and had various problems. Ended up useing a copy of XP Pro to try and get ride of problems. Didn't want to stay with unotherized copy so bought copy of XP Pro andwas going to install.

Did not work and ended with no way to boot up

Used old copy of Win 98 Startup disk to get access to CD, found that XP will not install except under Windows, crap

So had to format to install, didn't check disk size shown for the 20 gig hard drive. Installed Win 98 and then installed upgrade Windows XP Professional. Still didn't check hard drive size, downloaded and installed pertanant Win updates and Norton Anti-Virus. Tried to install another program and it says not enough hard drive space
Check harddrive size and all Windows sees is 2 Gig instead of 20 Gig. Put in spare 20 gig hard drive, formatted and it also shows only a 2 gig hard drive

Help me please.
Thanks, Lorin
 
S

Shenan Stanley

Lorin said:
Bought computer with XP Home and had various problems. Ended up
useing a copy of XP Pro to try and get ride of problems. Didn't want
to stay with unotherized copy so bought copy of XP Pro andwas going
to install.

Did not work and ended with no way to boot up.

Used old copy of Win 98 Startup disk to get access to CD, found that
XP will not install except under Windows, crap.

So had to format to install, didn't check disk size shown for the 20
gig hard drive. Installed Win 98 and then installed upgrade Windows
XP Professional. Still didn't check hard drive size, downloaded and
installed pertanant Win updates and Norton Anti-Virus. Tried to
install another program and it says not enough hard drive space.
Check harddrive size and all Windows sees is 2 Gig instead of 20 Gig.
Put in spare 20 gig hard drive, formatted and it also shows only a 2
gig hard drive.

Well, you probably formatted with FAT.
What you need to do is install Windows XP from the start.
Either boot with the Windows XP CD or with the Windows XP Setup diskettes:

XP Home Edition:
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/...FamilyID=E8FE6868-6E4F-471C-B455-BD5AFEE126D8

XP Professional Edition:
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/...db-5039-4955-bcb7-4fed408ea73f&displaylang=en

You'll need 6 blank floppy diskettes.

Then format (delete all partitions and create new ones to install on) and
follow the prompts to finish installing. Before ever connecting to an
Internet connection, get that firewall turned on then visit the
http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com as many times as it takes to get all the
critical updates before doing much else!

Note that Microsoft is not sending you patches in emails nor should you EVER
open attachments you did not expect in emails. You simply posted your
un-munged email address to the thousands of newsgroups that this is spread
to around the world and it has been "harvested".

My other suggestions to you include:

Please Notice that if you use AOL, you should at least upgrade to 9.0 or
greater before doing any of the fixes. I know you can get AOL 9.0 at almost
any convenience store, gas station, super market or other retail outlet in
the world, so this should not be a problem.


Turn on that firewall...
http://www.microsoft.com/WindowsXP/home/using/howto/homenet/icf.asp
(It has been reported that it now works with AOL 9.0+)


Make sure you have all the updates (critical) installed from:
http://windowsupdate.microsoft.com/
(Scan for updates, Review and Install)


Get rid of the spy/ad/mal-ware..
(Yes - using MORE than one of these..
I recommend at least the first three. Also..
UPDATE the definitions for them before using.)

Spybot Search and Destroy
http://www.safer-networking.net/

Lavasoft AdAware
http://www.lavasoft.de

CWSShredder
http://www.spywareinfo.com/~merijn/downloads.html

Hijack This!
http://mjc1.com/mirror/hjt/

I also like "The Cleaner" and "SpywareBlaster" and "SpywareGuard".
- http://www.moosoft.com/
- http://www.javacoolsoftware.com/

The first is a PAY product, but useable for 30 days - it has found and
eliminated problems in the past the others did not. The latter two are
prevention mechanisms. I like SpywareGuard for those with enough processor
to have something running like antivirus software - and it prevents browser
hijacking quite well. SpywareBlaster is a FANTASTIC free product, I suggest
getting this after you cleanup and keeping it updated as well....

And Assortment of Others:
http://spywareinfo.com/

ALSO - Be sure to IMMUNIZE after you clean up. SpywareBlaster and Spybot
Search and destroy both have these features - use both!


After you cleanup your PC somewhat of spy/ad/mal-ware, verify your antivirus
software is updated and run a full scan of your computer. If you have no
antivirus software - get one NOW! Grisoft AntiVirus:
http://www.grisoft.com/us/us_dwnl_free.php


Empty your Temporary Internet Files and shrink the size it stores to about
80 to 120MB (seems to be an optimal size for the normal user)

- Open ONE copy of Internet Explorer.
- Select TOOLS -> Internet Options.
- Under the General tab in the "Temporary Internet Files" section,
do the following:
- Click on "Delete Cookies" (click OK)
- Click on "Settings" and change the
"Amount of disk space to use:" to something between 80MB
and 120MB. (Betting it is MUCH larger right now.)
- Click OK.
- Click on "Delete Files" and select to
"Delete all offline contents" (the checkbox) and click
OK. (If you had a LOT, this could take 2-10 minutes or
more.)
- Once it is done, click OK, close Internet Explorer
- Re-open Internet Explorer.


Uninstall any software you do not use often/ever. (If you have something
installed but never use it, uninstall it.) If you go through Control
Panel -> Add/Remove Programs and see things you seldom if ever use, it is to
your advantage to remove it.


Also, if you are tired of Web Page Pop-Ups/Unders.. You could try the
Google Toolbar.
http://toolbar.google.com/


Stop loading applications at logon.. run MSCONFIG and look under the startup
tab for things you DON'T want to startup! Search the Internet with Google
to discover what things are safe to remove and what things may even be
malware infecting your computer.


Better control your email and lessen the amount of time you spend dealing
with SPAM:
SpamBayes
http://sourceforge.net/projects/spambayes/
or
Spamihilator.
http://www.spamihilator.com
 
G

Guest

thanks Stanley for the info and the email. Every new addition of Windows that I try, makes me so hopping mad for such a while. Windows XP is no different, oh how I yearn for WFWG 3.1, the last version that I understand.
 
M

Mike

Yeah.. like we all miss the dreaded 'Unrecoverable Application Error', the
heady days when 4mb RAM and a 120mb HD was really pushing the boat out,
messing with Autoexec.bat and Config.sys, loading DOS into high memory in an
attempt to get more resources to run games, editing the Win.ini 'run' line
to stop some idiotic program bouncing around at startup, wondering if we
needed protective ear pieces to ward of the excessive noise of the latest
high output Panasonic or Oki dot matrix printer.. they were the days..


Lorin said:
thanks Stanley for the info and the email. Every new addition of Windows
that I try, makes me so hopping mad for such a while. Windows XP is no
different, oh how I yearn for WFWG 3.1, the last version that I understand.
 
S

Sandman

Sorry, but it sounds as if you got careless and thought WIndows could sort
it all out(?)

If you have a full version of Windows XP, NOT an upgrade version,
drop the disc into the cd-rom and restart the PC... Files will be added and
XP will ask if you want to install XP... Yes, you do..
Windows will tell you it has found all that junk you previuosly installed
and ask if you want to DELETE the partition that it is on? Yes, you do..
You will then select to create a new partition that will recover all that
space for the clean install of XP, which means nothing else is on that
HD..The size of that 20 gig HD will not show-up as a full 20 gigs, but
close..
There will appear below that larger space, a SMALLER (maybe 2 gigs) of
'unallocated space'..
That is 'head room' so to speak and you don't want to use that smaller space
to install XP on, so be careful at this point in the install..Choose the
'upper number' so to speak, which is the largest of the 2 numbers..

So you will choose to create a new partition on that space that is
presented. You want it to be the NTFS file system (which maybe the only
option presented; ignore FAT32 if that is there)
Choose NTFS.........

Read carefully a this point... you want to be able to use ALL the HD
space that is available
You will next be asked if you want to 'quick format' or Long or full
(not sure about the exact word,) BUT you do not want 'quick' .. The reason
is important.. If your HD has a lot of bad sectors on it they will show-up
onna full format, a 'quick format' won't go thru the whole HD.
This is important on the off chance your HD is not in great shape you
will find out now. better now than later...

you should now get to let WIndows do the format which will take awhile.
After that, the install will start and you will after 40 minutes or so, get
to enjoy using XP without all the problems that usually occur when you
upgrade from Windows 98 or ME; I just don't believe anyone was even
thinking when they offered that possibility to consumers..
good luck.....
 
C

Crusty \(-: Old B@stard :-\)

You partitioned your drive with an old version of fdisk which uses fat16.
This has a maximum size of 2 gig. If you had used a startup disk from
Windows 98se you could have used fat32 which would have given you a maximum
of the entire drive.

Alternatively, you boot from the Windows XP CD and partition/format from
there. You use the NTFS option and again can partition for the entire disk,
in your case - 20 gig.

--
Regards:

Richard Urban

aka Crusty (-: Old B@stard :)
 

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