Unless there's a 3rd party utility to do it, you won't. I have Win 98 and
Win 2000 sharing a 13G drive and Linux on it's own 5.7G drive. Windows
[either flavor] can't see the Linux drive.
----Original Message Follows----
I am running Linux and Windows 98 on the same computer but on different
hard drives. After setting aside a 2.1 Gb drive ( drive D:\ ) for the
Linux OS, I installed Linux successfully. But when I go into windows,
it seems to not recognize the drive where I am storing the Linux OS.
What was drive E now becomes drive D. And now, when I open My
Computer, both the E: drive and F: drives have the cd-rom icon.
Originally, my F: drive is my CD-ROM drive.
How do I make Windows recognize the Linux drive? Or is there another
way to solve this problem??
thanks,
Brandon
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