What more information do you need?
lspci and lsusb have nothing to do with the problem, nor does the disk
type or settings.
Most people who have this problem don't have this problem for very long
because they fix it; but you can reproduce the problem on any PC like
this:
sudo sfdisk -d /dev/sdX | tee ORIG.$$ | sed 's/^\(.*start=
*\)\([0-9]*\)\(.*\)/\1 63 \3/' | sudo sfdisk /dev/sdX
and produce an overlapping partition table by making all partitions
start at position 63.
In such a case gparted wrongly shows that there are no partitions.
Sam
** Changed in: parted (Ubuntu)
Status: Invalid => New
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gparted shows empty disk
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/96976
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