Nooby guide for new user. - Printable Version +- Hasleo Software Forums (https://www.easyuefi.com/forums) +-- Forum: Hasleo Software (formerly called EasyUEFI Development Team) (https://www.easyuefi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=1) +--- Forum: WinToUSB (Best Windows To Go Creator) (https://www.easyuefi.com/forums/forumdisplay.php?fid=2) +--- Thread: Nooby guide for new user. (/showthread.php?tid=154) |
Nooby guide for new user. - bluman855 - 07-01-2015 Well, anyone have a guide thats simpler to understand? Im using a My Passport 2TB drive, I have a 1 TB partition for storing files(I want to keep it intact), and 350 GB allocated for the OS. When I start up WinToUsb, and select my disk, this appears(Look in attachments). HELP P.S My os is windows 7 pro 32 bit. What im trying to install on the drive is windows 8.1 pro 64 bit. RE: Nooby guide for new user. - admin - 07-01-2015 You need to format these two partition. For more information, please refer to the guidelines Here: http://www.easyuefi.com/wintousb/faq/en_US/How-to-use-WinToUSB.html RE: Nooby guide for new user. - bluman855 - 07-02-2015 I have the 350 gigabyte partition formatted as NTFS. Do I need to create a smaller partition in the 350 gig one for the system partition? If so, how big? RE: Nooby guide for new user. - bluman855 - 07-02-2015 Or can I just use the 350 gigabyte partition as the boot AND the system partition? I have the 350 gigabyte partition formatted to NTFS, but It still appears as "unknown". Plus, there are no bubbles for me to select the partition. RE: Nooby guide for new user. - bluman855 - 07-02-2015 Oh wait, even though I did a complete format, the files from my previous linux partition are still there, and now its back to appearing as EXT3. Damn. Is there anyway that I can format it in windows? RE: Nooby guide for new user. - admin - 07-04-2015 Follow this link to format partitions: http://wdc.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3865/~/how-to-partition-and-format-a-wd-drive-on-windows-(8.1,-8,-7,-vista,-xp)-and RE: Nooby guide for new user. - danskeman - 07-24-2015 You could create a virtual machine using virtualbox or vmware and install 8.1 into that. Safest way of having two (or more) operating systems |