cellular partition
boot partitionThe boot partition is the disk partition that contains the Windows operating system files and its support files, but not any files responsible for booting.
root partition
To back up files with Partition Wizard, you need to select the desired partition and enter "copy". Next select the the position and hit "next". You can then set the partition size by dragging the arrow or you could the values into the text box and then click "finish".
By default C: is the active partition of the hard disk drive
On MS platforms, the system partition is used to hold the boot files. The boot partition holds all the windows operating system files. Leave it to Microsuck to mis-lable the partition hiearchy. The system partition holds what is loaded and executed first after the computer runs through its preliminary BIOS boot sequence. It tells the computer where to start loading the operating system from; the boot partition. The boot partition is where all the program files (thousands of them) needed by the operating system are stored. If the system partition is deleted; the computer will not find the operating system. If the boot partition is deleted, again; the computer will not find the operating system.
Mounting a disk partition refers to the process of making the contents of that partition accessible to the operating system and users. This involves associating the partition with a specific directory in the file system hierarchy, allowing files and directories on the partition to be accessed like any other files on the system. When a partition is mounted, it can be read from and written to, while unmounting a partition safely disconnects it from the file system, preventing data loss.
boot partition
Boot Partition
(On Windows), the active partition is a primary partition on a disk which Windows will load its files from. An active partition is always a startup partition. If there are several OS's on the one disk, Windows will load from the one marked as active. - pentavore
The recovery image should not be altered by storing files on the partition holding the file. It's a safety device in case something happens to the main partition holding Windows. Altering or storing files to the recovery partition - may make rescuing the hard-drive impossible.
Yes, you can. But you have to be careful and make sure that boot files are on another partition.
it removes only the partitioned area.so no need to worry