Yeah if there professional's.
Use any disk partitioning program to resize the drive.
You can partition your hard drive and install Windows Server onto the partitioned space. You then can boot up from either Windows 7 or Windows Server.
windows should automaticly recognize your slave drive and run it as the next available letter drive for example i have a 2tb hard drive partitioned to c, d, and e. i then have my DVD drive named f. with the remaining unallocated space (not formated to a recognizable state) i partitioned to g,h,i,j and my 500gb harddrive comes up as my k drive.
Always should the drive be partitioned. As NTFS for Windows 7. You can edit partitions while installing Windows through the installation menu or command prompt, or in diskmanager after the operating system is installed.
If you do not have Windows 7 on a DVD or have not made a back-up of 7, or do not have the hard drive partitioned with 7 saved on that partition, you are out of luck.
Unless you already have a free partition on your hard drive or an additional hard drive, you cannot install Red Hat Enterprise Linux without "disturbing" Windows; you will need to resize the Windows partition to make room.
Try reinstalling the driver for the CD drive
Not directly. You can format the hard drive and install Windows XP cleanly. You can upgrade directly to Windows XP Professional (which is more expensive).
There is always 8 MB of unpartitioned space so that you can retain the ability to convert the drive to a dynamic volume. If you have already partitioned the drive from the following operating systems, the empty drive is hidden: MS-DOS Microsoft Windows 95 Microsoft Windows 98 Microsoft Windows 98 Second Edition Microsoft Windows NT 4.0 Microsoft Windows 2000
disk By default, 'C' denotes a partition of your hard disk drive (given that it has been partitioned) in which windows and its associated system files are stored. C is known as the Local Disk Drive.
If you chose the option to resize the hard drive to make room for Ubuntu, there will an entry for Windows XP on a boot menu when you start the computer. If you chose to use the entire disk, Windows XP was erased, and recovery is probably not possible.
You cannot reverse such process especially after you have installed the os. But if you remember the old partition size you can format the disk again, delete partitions which you don't need and create a partition which you want to have.