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Norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7
Norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7





  1. #Norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7 install#
  2. #Norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7 drivers#

HP A530n, AMD Athlon64 3200 1.5 GB RAM WinXP HP dv2210us, AMD Turino 2.5 GB RAM dual boot Vista 32 and Bayahnihan Linux

#Norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7 drivers#

Win7 also updated the audio drivers so now I have sound too! I also installed Norton 360, but there are a couple of driver issues.

norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7

Once I dug up my drivers CD and went through Device Manager and double clicked on the network controller icon with the yellow triangle, I was able to point Win7 to the CD and it installed the correct driver. I did have an issue with my network card, as the onboard LAN connector is toast. Selected custom install, and it worked just fine from then on. I then opened the DVD/RW I burned with Win7 on it. I used this to quick format the partition I made with System Commander, then uninstalled System Commander.

norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7

It reminds me of FDISK but with a GUI interface. I also learned WinXP has the same partition viewer Vista does (right click My Computer and select manage).

#Norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7 install#

However, I think the program was causing a conflict with the Win7 install because it hides NTFS partitions by default so the only NTFS drive Windows sees is the one it is on. system requirements? Readme for older ATI graphics card and Windows 7 users - JoelbX Okay, I think I got it! I was using System Commander 7 (it includes Partition Commander) to create/resize/delete partitions. Hello! Please reply back, promptly if possible with the results to solutions to your problem! Curious about Win7 min. Make sure to use the Live CD version so you can just boot off of the GParted disc. Have you tried using GParted to modify/create the partition? Go to to get GParted. If you want the easy way (assuming you install two 32- or two 64-bit systems), start XP and run "setup" on the DVD or from a mounted ISO that ensures that the presence of XP is taken into consideration and there won't be much to configure. The bootloaders of both systems will be placed on your first partition, a 100MB "system reserved" partition will not be created (as opposed to a stand-alone install of Win7 on a blank hard drive), and your XP partition will remain untouched (it will ignore the addition of Win7's bootloader). Now, if you want to setup a dual-boot system (allowing you to start either XP or Win7), simply do a clean install (custom) on this second partition. So, one partition must be active (booted by BIOS), the other must be only a primary partition. The question is, what are you trying to do? You can't have two bootable partitions on one drive, or your BIOS would be confused what to start when you're booting.







Norton disk doctor boot disk for windows 7