formatting hard drive

G

Guest

I tried uninstalling windows xp home edition but it won't let me. I tried
formatting my hard drive but I get the message that the volume is in use and
cannot be locked. It is a fat 32 system. How can I format my hard drive?
 
R

Rock

I tried uninstalling windows xp home edition but it won't let me. I tried
formatting my hard drive but I get the message that the volume is in use
and
cannot be locked. It is a fat 32 system. How can I format my hard drive?

You can't "uninstall" the OS. The way to get rid of an OS is to delete the
partition it's on and/or format it. Didn't you read the responses to your
other post? You can't format from within XP. Boot from the XP CD. See
your other post.
 
J

Jonny

Rock said:
You can't "uninstall" the OS. The way to get rid of an OS is to delete
the partition it's on and/or format it. Didn't you read the responses to
your other post? You can't format from within XP. Boot from the XP CD.
See your other post.

You're right, of course, Rock. For clarification, XP cannot format the
partition from which it sources its files. XP can format other partitions.

Some readers may be keying in on "You can't format from within XP."
sentence.
 
R

Rock

You're right, of course, Rock. For clarification, XP cannot format the
partition from which it sources its files. XP can format other
partitions.

Some readers may be keying in on "You can't format from within XP."
sentence.


Yes, good clarification.
 
K

Ken Blake, MVP

Natalie said:
I tried uninstalling windows xp home edition but it won't let me.


As a general rule, you can't uninstall any operating system. You have to
reformat the drive and install another operating system cleanly.

There's an exception to that, however. If you did an upgrade from Windows 98
or Me, and took the option to save the previous operating system and also
did not convert your drive to NTFS, then you can find an entry in Add/Remove
Programs. Clicking on that will uninstall Windows XP and revert to the
previous operating system.

If there's no entry in Add/Remove Programs, then one or more of those
conditions wasn't met, and your only choice is to reformat and install
whatever operating system you want cleanly.

I
tried formatting my hard drive but I get the message that the volume
is in use and cannot be locked. It is a fat 32 system. How can I
format my hard drive?


You can't format the Windows drive from within Windows, since that would
leave Windows without a leg to stand on.

Do you want to reformat and reinstall Windows XP? Just boot from the Windows
XP CD (change the BIOS boot order if necessary to accomplish this) and
follow the prompts for a clean installation (delete the existing partition
by pressing "D" when prompted, then create a new one).

You can find detailed instructions here:
http://michaelstevenstech.com/cleanxpinstall.html

or here http://windowsxp.mvps.org/XPClean.htm

or here http://www.webtree.ca/windowsxp/clean_install.htm

However why do you want to reformat and reinstall? In my view, it's usually
a mistake. With a modicum of care, it should never be necessary to reinstall
Windows (XP or any other version). I've run Windows 3.0, 3.1, WFWG 3.11,
Windows 95, Windows 98, Windows 2000, and Windows XP, each for the period of
time before the next version came out, and each on two machines here. I
never reinstalled any of them, and I have never had anything more than an
occasional minor problem.

It's my belief that this mistaken notion stems from the technical support
people at many of the larger OEMs. Their solution to almost any problem they
don't quickly know the answer to is "reformat and reinstall." That's the
perfect solution for them. It gets you off the phone quickly, it almost
always works, and it doesn't require them to do any real troubleshooting (a
skill that most of them obviously don't possess in any great degree).

But it leaves you with all the work and all the problems. You have to
restore all your data backups, you have to reinstall all your programs, you
have to reinstall all the Windows and application updates,you have to locate
and install all the needed drivers for your system, you have to recustomize
Windows and all your apps to work the way you're comfortable with.

Besides all those things being time-consuming and troublesome, you may have
trouble with some of them: can you find all your application CDs? Can you
find all the needed installation codes? Do you have data backups to restore?
Do you even remember all the customizations and tweaks you may have
installed to make everything work the way you like? Occasionally there are
problems that are so difficult to solve that Windows should be reinstalled
cleanly. But they are few and far between; reinstallation should not be a
substitute for troubleshooting; it should be a last resort, to be done only
after all other attempts at troubleshooting by a qualified person have
failed.

If you have problems, post them here; it's likely that someone can help you
and a reinstallation won't be required.
 
B

Bruce Chambers

Natalie said:
I tried uninstalling windows xp home edition but it won't let me.

The normal way to "uninstall" any operating system is to format the
hard drive and install a new OS of your choice.
I tried
formatting my hard drive but I get the message that the volume is in use and
cannot be locked. It is a fat 32 system. How can I format my hard drive?


It sounds like you started Setup from within WinXP and therefore
you're trying to format the drive containing the system volume from
within WinXP. You can't. This would be the computer equivalent of
sawing off the tree limb you're sitting on, and WinXP is "too smart" to
allow this.

Simply boot from the WinXP installation CD. You'll be offered the
opportunity to delete, create, and format partitions as part of the
installation process. (You may need to re-arrange the order of boot
devices in the PC's BIOS to boot from the CD.)



--

Bruce Chambers

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