Subj : Re: 10 net To : CHARLES ANGELICH From : ROBERT FOWLER Date : Tue Sep 13 2005 07:04 pm -=> CHARLES ANGELICH wrote to WAYNE CHIRNSIDE <=- WC> The blasted proprietary setup partition. Messes with Linux WC> to. FIPS non-destructive partitioning docs warn it's IS WC> destructive in Compaqs. CA> Seems few understand the Compaq 'setup partition'. It was an CA> idea ahead of it's time (sort of). IBM used something similar CA> for the PS2 line of computers. A portion of the BIOS was CA> written on the hard drive and, I suppose, because it must be CA> read in by a 'bootstrap loader' must be in the _first_ CA> partition. I can imagine ways they could've worked around this CA> but putting it first was probably the easiest least complicated CA> method at one time? CA> I have two Compaq machines and neither has this 'setup CA> partition'. Contrary to what the documentation tells users I CA> did find software that will access the Compaq BIOS to make CA> changes that works without this setup partition being on the CA> hard drive. CA> Both are older models using DOS and W31. I have no idea what a CA> new Compaq would require or even if Compaq continues to use CA> this 'setup partition'. HP has hidden directories with Windows CA> CAB files in them to make life easier for their helpline CA> employees I suppose? I have a Compaq Evo D10, which is a business class P4 machine. It has no hidden partition, and it uses Phoenix Bios, accessible from the Del key on boot up. Regards, Robert Fowler .... MultiMail, the new multi-platform, multi-format offline reader! --- MultiMail/Win32 v0.43 * Origin: Try Our Web Based QWK: DOCSPLACE.ORG (1:123/140) .