Are you interested in trying out Windows 10? Just take
a few minutes to think about it.
If you are then you are
lucky. Microsoft released a
Technical Preview of the upcoming
Windows operating system that is free for anyone to download and install. There
are a few different options for getting Windows 10 on your device. You can
simply install it on a secondary PC over your existing Windows operating
system, you can use a virtual
PC emulator like vmware, oracle vm e.t.c to test
it out or you can partition your hard
drive and install it on your primary PC. This guide will show you how to partition
your hard drive and do it.
While using a virtual PC
to install Windows 10 may be easier, performance may be reduced because you are
splitting your memory between two operating systems. Creating a hard-drive
partition, which will split the hard drive into different storage volumes, will
let you experience Windows 10 as it was meant to be. The best part about this
method is that once it's all said and done, you can simply delete the partition
and return your PC to normal. Below are the steps;
1) Open the Control Panel
2) click on System and Security
3) select Administrative Tools.
4) Double-click on Computer Management
5) under the Storage submenu.
6) click Disk Management.
7) Right-click your primary drive (in most cases
this will be the C volume).
8) select the Shrink Volume option from the list.
9) If you
are installing the 32-bit version of Windows 10 you will need at least 16GB,
while the 64-bit version will require 20GB of free space. On my 500GB hard
drive, I allocated 100GB to Windows 10, which gave me more than enough space to
play around with the operating system. Remember that 1,000 megabytes is roughly
equivalent to 1 gigabyte although technically it is 1,024MB to 1GB).
Sarah Tew/CNET
10)You should now see an "unallocated"
amount of storage appear next to your C volume.
11)Right-click it, select "New Simple
Volume" from the list and click on the Next button.
12)You can assign the drive any letter you please;
I simply selected E.
13)After clicking Next a third time, you will come
to the Format Partition section. Make sure NTFS is selected for the file system
and choose a name for the partition. I went with the name "Windows
10."
14)Click Next one last time and then on Finished.
You should now have a blank drive to install Windows 10 on.
Note:To get things back to normal, right-click the partition and select
"Delete Volume" from the list. Then, right-click the C drive and
select Extend Volume.
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