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SYSTEM RESTORE AND UNEXPECTED UNINSTALLATION

Sometimes a System Restore operation has the unintended consequence of messing up a program you recently installed.  The net effect is that a program may appear to be installed but is missing vital files that were “unhooked” by the System Restore operation. Because you probably ran System Restore to recover from a disaster, I don’t recommend undoing the System Restore.   Instead, what you need to do is reinstall the program that’s screwing up. Doing so reconnects the items that System Restore disconnected.

NO MORE PARTITIONS!

Don’t be surprised if none of the new volume commands is available. That’s because Windows places a limit on the number of partitions your computer system can access. 

The official limit is four primary partitions, or three primary partitions and one extended partition.

Because Disk 0 C is typically partitioned into three primary partitions (the EUFI, drive C, and Recovery), this means you can have one

more partition and that’s it!

The limitation doesn’t apply to multiple hard drives, so you can keep adding hard drives to the system. You just can’t split any of those

hard drives into multiple partitions.

All hope isn’t lost, however. Third-party utilities let you create multiple partitions. For example, if it’s your intent to install Linux as a second operating system, the Linux setup utility creates the necessary partitions for you. 

Other third party utilities help you create  additional partitions. And if it’s your intent to run multiple operating systems, get a boot loader manager program, which usually comes with partition-creating and -managing tools.

 TheFAT32 file system cannot access devices larger than 2TB. Further, if the disk was

initialized using the MBR scheme, it cannot extend partitions beyond the 2TB mark. The solution

is to convert the boot record to the GUID Partition Table (GPT) format. To perform this

operation, you need a third-party disk partition manager that can make the change without destroying the media’s data.

Or you can simply contact to digithics.

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