Am 20. Jun, 2006 schwätzte Josh Coffman so: > Ok, maybe not my life but my pc. Linux has saved my > butt a couple times in the last year. I am now working > from home and built a pc for this purpose. The > drawback is that it is as a windows programmer. So > windows is the only OS on my desktop. :( > > Problem is that I was so excited to get it built and > working that I forgot to supply the SATA driver to the > windows install. So it installed the win boot loader > on a 20 gig partition of a secondary IDE drive; and > Windows on the first 80 gig of my SATA. > > This is not what I really want. I want to boot from > the SATA drive. And I dont want to spend another 15 > hours installing windows and the software I need. > > What I'd like to do is move the windows partition, > setup the boot partition, and add Fedora on this box. Do you want m$ on the SATA drive or on the IDE drive? Theoretically, you can create a new partition, then dd the old filesystem onto it. The new partition has to be at least as large as what you're copying. This works for Linux, but I wouldn't know from personal experience if it works for m$. Drive letters might change. There might be other caveats. > I was thinking i could use the GParted Live distro to > move the windows partition, then install Fedora and > use GRUB to boot windows. (and maybe get VMWare > running windows under linux. :) > > Does this soudn like it could work? It should, provided m$ is moved properly. > -j aka "plug village idiot" You might have to fight for that title. Let's just say you've got a greencard and you're working on duel-citizenship :). ciao, der.hans -- # https://www.LuftHans.com/ http://www.CiscoLearning.org/ # Join the League of Professional System Administrators! https://LOPSA.org/ # "Life is pain, Highness! Anyone who says differently is selling something." # -- Dread Pirate Roberts in The Princess Bride