(Sorry for the delay; I've been busy with schoolwork and haven't had the time to dink with my computer.) On Sunday 27 July 2003 17:19, Joe Morris (NTM) wrote:
What version of Windows?
Windows 98.
What does the Dos fdisk show you, or is this Windows XP.
Okay, I've gone ahead and remade the HDA7 partition the way I want it (I'd changed it back to a Linux partition to avoid trouble while I worked on homework). I used YaST's partitioning tool to do so, just FYI. It works just fine from Linux, but I haven't tried booting in Windows yet. This is the Linux fdisk output: --- Disk /dev/hda: 14.4 GB, 14453268480 bytes 255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 1757 cylinders Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes Device Boot Start End Blocks Id System /dev/hda1 1 395 3172806 b Win95 FAT32 /dev/hda2 * 396 1757 10940265 5 Extended /dev/hda5 396 428 265041 82 Linux swap /dev/hda6 429 880 3630658+ 83 Linux /dev/hda7 881 1757 7044471 c Win95 FAT32 (LBA) --- However, Windows's fdisk (I booted into command-prompt-only mode) told me that there was only one logical partition on drive D, named with a bizarre series of symbols and 10 gigs in size. I was careful not to touch anything there, not wanting to screw things up, but it looks like Windows isn't reading the partition table correctly or something... So, what's my next step?