rhkra...@gmail.com composed on 2019-12-29 07:55 (UTC-0500): > Interesting, I'm wondering about the logic behind that -- was that an effort > to > segregate the user's "real" data (photos, videos, email, ...) on a separate > partition?
> Which manufacturer? Probably: HP Dell Toshiba Lenovo and others > What is on /dev/sda3 and /dev/sda4? ESP MSR WinOS Recovery <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Reserved_Partition> <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/manufacture/desktop/images/dep-win10-partitions-uefi.png> from <https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/manufacture/desktop/configure-uefigpt-based-hard-drive-partitions> IMO it's inept not to have a 5th purely for user data. > (Are /dev/sda1 and > /dev/sda2 as described in the original email (Windows and Windows recovery > partitions)? > I don't remember the correct terminology, but is the partioning done under > whe > old scheme (where there can be up to 4 primary partitions or 3 primary > partions and then (hmm, iirc, up to 12?) extended partitions "under" > /dev/sda, > or under the new scheme (which I don't remember enough about to describe -- I > vaguely think a lot more partitions and all of them primary?)? This is UEFI/GPT. Win7/8/10 requires UEFI on every system whose "BIOS" is actually UEFI, which is essentially all PCs made since the advent of Win 8 or 10. With GPT there is no concept of primary/extended/logical. -- Evolution as taught in public schools is religion, not science. Team OS/2 ** Reg. Linux User #211409 ** a11y rocks! Felix Miata *** http://fm.no-ip.com/