Manuel,

He may be trying to partition a new disk, or he may be trying to use unused
space
from an existing disk... for example, he may have had a multiple boot
system, and
be removing an unused OS, and wants to repartition that section from, for
example,
FAT to EXT2.  A very valid use for Disk Druid, you see, that does not wipe
out
his existing installation of Linux.

Also, turn off the HTML... a lot of folks filter out HTML using procmail,
and
in general, it's not nice to send it to folks that you aren't sure can read
it
in their mail program.

Bill Ward

-----Original Message-----
From: Manuel Antonio Camacho Quesada [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Monday, February 07, 2000 12:56 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: RE: Disk Druid


Robert: using DiskDruid after you finished your installation will ruin your
partitions, and erase your information. If you want to keep your actual
information, you should look for a repartitioning tool such as
PartitionMagic or FIPS.
 
-Manuel.
-----Mensaje original-----
De: Roberta Nicolis [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Enviado el: Lunes, 07 de Febrero de 2000 10:33 a.m.
Para: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Asunto: Disk Druid


Hello, 
Is there anyone who knows how to use Disk Druid after the installation to
create new partitions or to edit the existing ones
thanks 
bye Roberta N. 


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