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Re: robert's advice on setting up shortcuts and icons to start xywrite



guess I have been lucky -- no crashes with windows.

Still -- with all my files in a root directory -- would they be lost if
windows crashes? I hope not.


andy t


----- Original Message -----
From: "Patricia M. Godfrey" 

To: 
Sent: Monday, December 29, 2008 5:19 PM
Subject: Re: robert's advice on setting up shortcuts and icons to start
xywrite



Andy Turnbull wrote:
I don't know how to partition a drive, or put (or use) anything in Windows program files, but I've been running XY from below windows in 6 or 7 machines, starting with Windows 95, and never had any trouble.
Windows never corrupted itself or got infected and had to be reinstalled? You've been _very lucky_ (esp. with 9x). But even if you don't get into trouble, as I always tell other women (I don't know quite what the guy analogy would be), "You don't store your groceries, your everyday and company china, and your pots and pans in the oven, do you?" It's totally illogical to dump opsys, Win apps, DOS apps, and data on one drive/partition. For all versions bfore Vista, you either need to get an additional program (Partition Commander or the like) to partition the drive as it comes from the manufacturer or wipe the drive, partition from the Windows setup disk, and reinstall Windows (rather difficult if the manufacturer didn't give you a real Windows CD, but just a disk-image restore CD.) Or you could buy bare iron and and an OEM copy of Windows and do it from scratch--but I doubt even Robert could do that on a laptop. They don't sell bare-iron laptops, at least not in the USA; I believe they do in the UK. Vista DOES let you live partition a drive: that is, you can unpartition the unused part of a drive and create new partitions on it without destroying what's on the used part. This is an enormously useful and helpful tool, and makes Vista worth putting up with, at least on laptops, IMO.
I do use a usb key to back up my dos files, and I have (recently) learned to do it in Windows. I liked the last century better than this one anyway.
Writing in 1964 and describing the medieval mind set, C. S. Lewis said that "At his most characteristic, medieval man was ....an organizer, a codifier, a builder of systems. .... Of all our modern inventions I suspect that they would most have admired the card index." Reading that in the 1980s, I immediately thought "No, the computerized database." Think what they could have done with it! -- Patricia M. Godfrey priscamg@xxxxxxxx
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