On 9/24/07, Christian Seberino <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I want my wife to try Ubuntu on her laptop but I'd like to
> not blow away the "hidden Windows partition" on it.
>
> I'm told somehow there is a hidden Windows dealie on the laptop to allow
> restoration should someone mess up their software?
>
> Anyone know how this works and how to avoid damaging it while installing
> Linux ?
>
> cs
>

Oh, those damn hidden restore partitions. Definitely image that drive
before you do anything else. I have a Lenovo that came with XP Home
that had one of those stupid things. I bought it, created the restore
DVD as per the instructions and it tested fine. I figured I'd just go
ahead and dual boot it with XP Pro. Little did I realize at the time
how integral that partition was. Figuring I could restore from the
restore DVD I'd just created if need be, I DBANed the drive and tried
to install my retail copy of XP Pro. It wouldn't install. It got to
the first setup screen and then the screen went blank. I have since
used this same XP disk on a subsequent laptop and there was no
trouble, so the disk wasn't bad. I came to find out that the partition
has some sort of encrypted key that will not allow XP to install
without it. I tried to restore from the restore DVD I'd created, and
the also failed at the same place. The Lenovo support site just showed
me how to create another restoer DVD online. I did -- no joy. It seems
you have to buy a restore disk if the hidden partition is wiped out. I
also tried a BIOS upgrade just in case that was a problem. Nothing.

Fortunately, Linux loaded just fine, and I am still using the laptop
as a Linux-only box. This is an annoying trend in Branded PCs and
laptops. You rarely get a set of restore disks on the cheaper PCs any
more and are expected to create a restore DVD or set of CDs from the
files in the hidden partition. Wipe that hidden partition or have it
corrupted by a virus, and you're screwed if the restore disks fail and
want to reinstall Windows.

Robert Donovan


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