You could probably boot to the Live CD, run "sudo gparted" from the commandline 
to bring up the partition editor and delete all the partitions. Or perhaps you 
could "dd if=/dev/null of=/dev/hda" to zero out the entire hard disk. *shrug* 
However, if Windows can't see a hard disk right now, I'm not sure what would 
make it do so, if you're certain the hard disk is plugged into the primary 
master position.
 
Best of luck!
 
Sim?n

________________________________

From: Michael Steigerwald [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Mon 2/26/2007 12:52 PM
To: Simon Ruiz
Subject: Re: Dual boot (XP) best practice?


I'm pretty sure it must be. I can boot into edubuntu just fine.
 
Is there some way from edubuntu or the CD that I can somehow reformat or wipe 
the CD to make the Windows CD happy again?
 
TIA

 
On 2/26/07, Simon Ruiz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

        Are you sure the hard disk is plugged into the hda (hd0) position on 
the motherboard? That's all I can think of. 
        
        There is nothing I am aware of that any Linux distribution could do to 
keep the Windows Installation CD from thinking there isn't a hard disk.
        
        Best of luck!
        
        Sim?n
        
        ________________________________ 
        
        From: Michael Steigerwald [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
        Sent: Mon 2/26/2007 12:36 PM
        To: Simon Ruiz
        Subject: Re: Dual boot (XP) best practice?
        
        
        Actually, that's the conclusion I came to, but I can't even start over 
until I can figure out why the XP CD thinks there are no hard drives to install 
to. Is there something in edubuntu I can 'undo' or completely reformat the 
drive? 
        
        
        On 2/26/07, Simon Ruiz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
        
               Windows assumes it will be the only Operating System on the 
disk, and so if the partition you intend to install it to ISN'T the first 
partition on the first hard disk, this may be why it won't accept it as an 
valid install partition. I'm sure there is a way to coax it to work when 
installing it second, but there are quite a few extra little complications to 
deal with. 
        
               I'd suggest starting over and installing Windows first. This is 
the only way I've ever done it, myself.
        
               Best of luck!
        
               Sim?n
        
               ________________________________ 
        
               From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] on behalf of Michael Steigerwald
               Sent: Mon 2/26/2007 12:15 PM
               To: [email protected]
               Subject: Dual boot (XP) best practice?
        
        
               I'm trying to set up my ThinkPad to boot into edubuntu or XP. I 
created an NTFS partition after I installed edubuntu, but got a new error when 
I tried to install Windows. 
        
               I booted from the XP Pro CD, and it claims that it can find any 
hard drives to install to. I wouldn't be too disappointed if I had to reformat 
the whole disk, but I'm surprised that the install CD can't even see the NTFS 
partition. 
        
               I know that edubuntu uses the GRUB loader, but I can get into 
the vanilla (ThinkPad) BIOS just fine. Did I corrupt something I need to use, 
e.g, Norton, for?
        
               TIA for any ideas.
        
        
        
        
        
        --
        Michael Steigerwald
        4041 12th Ave S.
        Minneapolis, MN 55407-3239
        [EMAIL PROTECTED]
        651.261.2098
        




-- 
Michael Steigerwald 
4041 12th Ave S.
Minneapolis, MN 55407-3239
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
651.261.2098 

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