Can't install new hard drive
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try removing your floppy and see if that blue screen goes away, since 1) you said the drive no longer functions with this BIOS and 2) It would be Listed as the A or B drive and most likely checked before everything else.
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franpa wrote:try removing your floppy and see if that blue screen goes away, since 1) you said the drive no longer functions with this BIOS and 2) It would be Listed as the A or B drive and most likely checked before everything else.


Floppy drives DO NOT GET LISTED in the partition list anyway, idiot.
<Nach> so why don't the two of you get your own room and leave us alone with this stupidity of yours?
NSRT here.
NSRT here.
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Well the nLite made the CD bootable, but I'm still getting the error. I don't think it matters what I do now. I've tried different CD ROM drives, different boot settings, I think it's impossible to install Windows 2000 on this BIOS version. I need to revert back to the previous version but I can't find it anywhere on the internet... this is a big problem.
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It's because of the tried and true mentality... "don't fix what ain't broken". Plus some mobos don't start with the initial BIOS (version/revision 1), for the possibility that your CPU that you got won't be recognized properly with the earlier BIOS.
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Technically, the manufacturer should provide all versions of the BIOS for a mobo.. but if you didn't heed their word, I guess that's on you. You may want to dig further on the site, or someone might be able to dig for you, but meh.
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Well it's been a while, hasn't it? So what happened was my 30 GB hard drive that I've had for 5 or 6 years finally died. Or at least has damaged sectors. I was able to recover most of the data I wanted from it, except the data that was also on my flash drive... which also died shortly after.
Anyway, I bought myself a new IDE hard drive so I could at least get Windows 2000 running on the new computer. The SATA is sitting in there as well, just not as a primary. It's working fine. Now, I used the slipstreamed Windows 2000 SP4 install, but still the IDE hard drive is recognized only as 128 GB instead of 160 GB. The SATA is being read as a 232 GB when it should be a 250 GB, but I guess that's closer. Anyway, how can I get the remaining space on the first hard drive back? Or how can I make it into a new partition? It doesn't seem to appear in Disk Management.

Anyway, I bought myself a new IDE hard drive so I could at least get Windows 2000 running on the new computer. The SATA is sitting in there as well, just not as a primary. It's working fine. Now, I used the slipstreamed Windows 2000 SP4 install, but still the IDE hard drive is recognized only as 128 GB instead of 160 GB. The SATA is being read as a 232 GB when it should be a 250 GB, but I guess that's closer. Anyway, how can I get the remaining space on the first hard drive back? Or how can I make it into a new partition? It doesn't seem to appear in Disk Management.
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The first hard drive sounds like you didn't enable 48-bit LBA addressing.Annihilated wrote:Anyway, I bought myself a new IDE hard drive so I could at least get Windows 2000 running on the new computer. The SATA is sitting in there as well, just not as a primary. It's working fine. Now, I used the slipstreamed Windows 2000 SP4 install, but still the IDE hard drive is recognized only as 128 GB instead of 160 GB. The SATA is being read as a 232 GB when it should be a 250 GB, but I guess that's closer. Anyway, how can I get the remaining space on the first hard drive back? Or how can I make it into a new partition? It doesn't seem to appear in Disk Management.
The second one sounds more like marketing speak kicked you in the nuts.
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-What is that? Do I do that in the BIOS?Deathlike2 wrote:The first hard drive sounds like you didn't enable 48-bit LBA addressing.Annihilated wrote:Anyway, I bought myself a new IDE hard drive so I could at least get Windows 2000 running on the new computer. The SATA is sitting in there as well, just not as a primary. It's working fine. Now, I used the slipstreamed Windows 2000 SP4 install, but still the IDE hard drive is recognized only as 128 GB instead of 160 GB. The SATA is being read as a 232 GB when it should be a 250 GB, but I guess that's closer. Anyway, how can I get the remaining space on the first hard drive back? Or how can I make it into a new partition? It doesn't seem to appear in Disk Management.
The second one sounds more like marketing speak kicked you in the nuts.
-Marketing speak? It was an OEM drive from newegg... and it says 250 GB right on the label. :-/
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It's a registry entry you have to enable.Annihilated wrote:-What is that? Do I do that in the BIOS?Deathlike2 wrote:The first hard drive sounds like you didn't enable 48-bit LBA addressing.Annihilated wrote:Anyway, I bought myself a new IDE hard drive so I could at least get Windows 2000 running on the new computer. The SATA is sitting in there as well, just not as a primary. It's working fine. Now, I used the slipstreamed Windows 2000 SP4 install, but still the IDE hard drive is recognized only as 128 GB instead of 160 GB. The SATA is being read as a 232 GB when it should be a 250 GB, but I guess that's closer. Anyway, how can I get the remaining space on the first hard drive back? Or how can I make it into a new partition? It doesn't seem to appear in Disk Management.
The second one sounds more like marketing speak kicked you in the nuts.
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/305098
So? They could be using stupid speak (1 GB = 1, 000, 000, 000 bytes).-Marketing speak? It was an OEM drive from newegg... and it says 250 GB right on the label. :-/
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Besides, 232GB sounds right anyway for a 250GB Drive.
So yeah, victimized by market speak.
So yeah, victimized by market speak.

<Nach> so why don't the two of you get your own room and leave us alone with this stupidity of yours?
NSRT here.
NSRT here.
232 for the 250 and 149 for the 160.
the "marketing speak" is using the metric definitions of the prefixes instead of the binary definitions.
package says 250GB (meaning 250,000,000,000 bytes). windows sees that and gives you 250,000,000,000 / (1024^3) = roughly 232.8GB.
infernal cat edit: also see my silly rant about it
the "marketing speak" is using the metric definitions of the prefixes instead of the binary definitions.
package says 250GB (meaning 250,000,000,000 bytes). windows sees that and gives you 250,000,000,000 / (1024^3) = roughly 232.8GB.
infernal cat edit: also see my silly rant about it
Why yes, my shift key *IS* broken.
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Well I resized the drive successfully now, thanks to this wonderful little program. I booted it from a floppy, and a couple of restarts later, I'm back up to 150 GB.
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I was never able to use that one. I tend to use the gparted live cd these days.Annihilated wrote:Well I resized the drive successfully now, thanks to this wonderful little program. I booted it from a floppy, and a couple of restarts later, I'm back up to 150 GB.
Edited due to spelling stupidity.