Maura Edelweiss Monville wrote:

So I installed 10.3 and at installation time I chose
"New Installation" believing this would wipe out the
hard drive so erasing 10.2 and store and install 10.3.
In short, I wished to get rid of 10.2.
But apparently I did not achieve my goal.

if you installed by default, it's a good thing if openSUSE don't delete any pré-installed partition...

1) Start 'openSuSE 10.3- 2.6.22.12-0.1' (current)
2) Start 'Failsafe -- openSuSE 10.3 ....'
3) Start 'openSuSE 10.2 - 2.6-18.8-0.7 (/dev/sda2)'

you have the same at boot time on the screen :-)

this mean 10.2 was on /dev/sda2

* to get rid of the entry *in the menu*, go to yast and look for the entry about boot manager and delete the 10.2 entry (or go to /boot/grub/men.lst and remove the 10.2 entry by hand - with vi)

* go always in yast to the disk partitionner et remove /dev/sda2.

this will wipe out 10.2.

after that you can always attribute the free disk space to whatever thing you want, for example mount it in /media/data and stire there your important data. You can even link this folder to your home...

jdd


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