On Friday 07 Oct 2011 08:25:36 Dale wrote: > Michael Mol wrote: > > On one hand, you can configure the locations of things like > > %PROGRAMFILES% and %SYSTEMROOT%. On the other hand, you can mount a > > volume wherever you like. > > > > I used this to use the same .libpurple directory on a machine > > dual-booted between WinXP 32-bit and WinVista 64-bit. A data volume > > was mounted at D:\Data, and I had NTFS junctions pointing my > > .libpurple on both boots at a directory on that volume. > > Hmmmm, this is interesting. My brother has filled up his hard drive and > I been planning on reinstalling to a larger drive. Maybe I need to > check into this more. He uses XP and I really hate to install windoze. > Since he had to spend $8,000.00 on a new mower, his new rig went to > second place in the budget. This could be the place for the next couple > years. Uhh, he mows grass for a living. Anyway, putting Documents on > its own drive would save me some grief. You will get some space back if you move all the backup files created with MSWindows updates out of C:\ (but not the index which is needed to be able to update it properly). If space is running out fast, then you may have a corrupt page file. Delete it and move it to another drive/partition. Finally, clear all cruft in /temp directory (somewhere under local settings) for each user. If you have another drive, move all his data out of C:\ then defrag and shrink the partition a bit, create new partition(s) and install Linux! ;-) -- Regards, Mick