The terms partition and volume are often interchangable and for most purposes the end user doesn't need to understand the difference. There is one however, and this is that partitions are physical separations on the hard drive, often but not always created by the user during installation of an operating system. Volumes on the other hand are logicalseparations of the hard drive. The difference for all intents and purposes is usually the same, but that logical systems of any sort only work within the context of the OS that is being used, where as physical systems will be permanent and recognized by any software.
The Physical drive is how much actual real space that is has to Store Data .. As Per Example you install Commadn and Conqure " The Newest On " ..Well It store the file with the Physical Dirves area, But As FAr as the Partition it only a small portion of space that lets the Computer Operating Ssytem know where it is what Drive Letter it has and where the Actuall File Data Have been written on via the cylandrical drive space it spins arounda nd uses for holding those file / daat mentioned above...
The system partition is the active partition of the hard drive and it contains the OS boot record. The boot partition is the partition where the Windows operating system is stored.
c: is that partition of ur harddisk from where ur system boots and d drive is any other partition.
drive is the partition on your hard disk - c:, d: etc are examples. softwares & files are stored in directories which are stored inside the drives of a hard disk. the hard disk is physical, partitions / drives as they are commonly called are virtual bifurcations on your physical drive, where softwares of files are stored in directories for ease of access to particular information.
yes, if ubuntu is on a different physical drive or on a different partition if you are stuck with one physical drive. No if it on the same partition as windows The soloution, create a new fresh partition just for windows and make it about , a minimum 40GB
A hard partition restructures the disc and each partition is recognised as a separate disc. A soft partition allows the operating system to recognise the partitions as separate discs but without changing the structure of the drive. Remember to always backup the contents of a disc before partitioning - even with a soft partition.
The system partition(a partition where the operating system is installed) is the active partition of the Hard Drive
On a Windows 98 system, there is very likely to only be one partition on the disk. The difference between formatting the disk and deleting the partition would thus be a matter of semantics. Either way, all the data on the hard drive would be gone.
Most of the time the boot partition and the system partition are the same partition on the drive C.
system partition
System partition
Most of the time the boot partition and the system partition are the same partition on the drive C.
what is the difference between drive and machine