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Very interesting Hard Drive space recovery
IceDigger - Mar 9, 2004

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 IceDigger Mar 9, 2004
Article...

Recover hidden partitions and gain some space. Very interesting read.

I have not tried this yet. Try at your own risk but as I said if it works it's VERY intereting.

 racketboy Mar 9, 2004
sounds too good to be true.

I'm sure the hard drive companies have the drives set up the way they are.

 IceDigger Mar 9, 2004
I am testing it on an old WD 10GB drive. Wish me luck.

 ExCyber Mar 9, 2004
It sounds like Ghost temporarily mangles the partition table in some way that only it understands, and Windows then misinterprets it when Ghost isn't allowed to clean up after itself. If this really resulted in more space, it would be verifiable at the ATA level regardless of OS/filesystem, and there's no indication that such verification actually happened.

 gameboy900 Mar 9, 2004
It most likey is just that the "new" partition is actually occupying the same space as the old one. In this case this would lead to some HORRIBLE data loss if you actually used them both.

 IceDigger Mar 9, 2004
Just got 9GB extra on the 10GB drive. I will now test it out by writing a bunch of data to it and see how those programs/movies run on both.

 IceDigger Mar 9, 2004
Ok, just got done benchmarking the "old" space and the "new" space

old - 12308kB/s

new - 11785kB/s

Not much of a difference between the 2.

So far nothing is wrong, no errors.

Going to copy a dvd to the hd and play that via alcohal on the space and see what happens.

Used Sisoft Sandra 2004

 ExCyber Mar 9, 2004
Just being able to access the "extra" space doesn't say much, because you don't see how the OS is addressing it.

Try this (in this order):

1) Extract the DVD, or part of it, to the "new" partition.

2) Fill up the "main" partition with garbage data like zero-compression ZIP files of c:\windows

3) Try to play the DVD stream

 IceDigger Mar 9, 2004
Will do.

 IceDigger Mar 9, 2004
Ok, partition magic says that the partitions do overlap each other. So I am guessing there will be data loss.

 antime Mar 10, 2004
The Inquirer received some feedback... on that story.

 MasterAkumaMatata Mar 10, 2004

  
	
	
Originally posted by IceMan2k@Mar 9, 2004 @ 02:54 PM

Ok, partition magic says that the partitions do overlap each other. So I am guessing there will be data loss.


:slap :cheers

 Alexvrb Mar 11, 2004
What? No magical free HD space?

 Tagrineth Mar 11, 2004
TANSTAAFL

 mal Mar 11, 2004
Que?

[edit] Oh I see. Why not just TNSTAAFL? It's not like you're ever actually going to say it so the A is kinda redundant...

 ExCyber Mar 12, 2004
The "TANSTAAFL" form supposedly comes from a direct quote from a Heinlein novel, which would explain why it remains popular compared to the very slightly abbreviated form.

 Tagrineth Mar 13, 2004

  
	
	
Originally posted by mal@Mar 11, 2004 @ 11:12 PM

Que?

[edit] Oh I see. Why not just TNSTAAFL? It's not like you're ever actually going to say it so the A is kinda redundant...


There Ain't No Such Thing As A Free Lunch.

If you're going to skip Ain't, you should skip As an A as they are usually insignificant for abbreviations - so TNSTFL. Just doesn't look right.

 Curtis Mar 13, 2004
Maybe, but you'd skip the "ain't" because you can abbreviate "There Ain't" to "There's". Without the two "A"s, it doesn't make sense:

"There's No Such Thing Free Lunch"

 Tagrineth Mar 13, 2004

  
	
	
Originally posted by Curtis@Mar 13, 2004 @ 09:57 PM

Maybe, but you'd skip the "ain't" because you can abbreviate "There Ain't" to "There's". Without the two "A"s, it doesn't make sense:

"There's No Such Thing Free Lunch"


No, no, you'd skip the A's for the abbreviation.

For example, we call the big country in North America, the United States of America - abbreviated USA because the 'of' is insignificant for abbreviation.

Another example could be NASA - the National Aeronautics and Space Administration.

 MasterAkumaMatata Mar 13, 2004
What about SOB? Son Of A Bitch? :lol:

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