Do Vista and 7 have to be near the beginning of the drive?
Vista part at **.
I'm sorry to ask elementary questions, but where on the HDD does win7 have to be installed. Does it have to be near the beginning of the drive like some earlier OSes did? I have a 500 GB drive with 2 100-GB partitions already. If I create a 3rd 100 GB partition, can I install win7 there? ** Actually a better question is, can I clone Vista to this new position and start Vista there, so that I can upgrade Vista to 7. I can't face the chore of installing all the various programs in 7 when they are already installed in Vista, unless there is a strong reason to do a fresh install and not install 7 over Vista. |
Do Vista and 7 have to be near the beginning of the drive?
Micky wrote:
Vista part at **. I'm sorry to ask elementary questions, but where on the HDD does win7 have to be installed. Does it have to be near the beginning of the drive like some earlier OSes did? I have a 500 GB drive with 2 100-GB partitions already. If I create a 3rd 100 GB partition, can I install win7 there? ** Actually a better question is, can I clone Vista to this new position and start Vista there, so that I can upgrade Vista to 7. I can't face the chore of installing all the various programs in 7 when they are already installed in Vista, unless there is a strong reason to do a fresh install and not install 7 over Vista. On a hard drive which is not short-stroked, the beginning of the disk has 2x the sequential speed of the very end of the disk. The outer ring of the platter is the speedy part. The inner ring, slow as molasses. Of course, everything benefits from being near the outer edge, and you cannot put everything out there. I have one drive which is short-stroked, and it has a much flatter curve. The drive on the left is short-stroked. There is no need to "fight for the best position" with that drive. That drive is 1TB capacity, and the heads only move from the outer ring to the center of the platter. The heads never touch the inner ring, and never go near the slow part. http://s29.postimg.org/8b7cj872v/wd500gb.gif Short-stroking is not documented, and is not guaranteed. I was quite surprised to find it on the drive. But the fact the manufacturer no longer makes drives below 1TB, explains why it happened. The drive exists as a short-term gap filler in the market - they take 1TB drives and degrade them to 500GB, and charge $10 less for them. I didn't know this was the case, until I started trying to figure out what was going on. When the 500GB drive is removed from the market, the 1TB drive it is based on, will have the usual 2X ratio between outside and inside. Paul |
All times are GMT. The time now is 01:01 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Optimization by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC6
Copyright ©2004-2006 VistaBanter.com