The win'98 startup disk has a dos program on it called "fdisk", it's the partitioning utility but it's very slow and a bit tricky as it takes a few attempts to do it properly usually, until you get the hang of it.
To use it, boot from floppy startup disc and type fdisk at the prompt... ie
>fdisk
The winXP install disk has a much better interface built in and it's as good and easy as any utils available for setting up hard drives.
All you do is boot from the WinXP CDROM and start the WinXP installation process. After a few screens you will see (if you watch the options carefully) the partitioning and formatting options....... just follow the prompts and enter the partition information you require.
Next, use the formatting option screen that comes up to format C: drive, as soon as the format is complete, Windows begins to load, and you have to wait until you are in windows to format any additional partitions I believe.
Doing the partitioning with the WinXP install disk is pretty fast as an added bonus.
My seagate hard drives can be stubborn when brand new and I sometimes need to use the Seagate util called Disk Wizard to activate a drive. It's a free util and can be downloaded. It works with other brand drives that i've tried, but it complains that you are using an unsupported drive and they take no responsibility .. blah blah....
Disk Wizard has a couple quirks, but once you get around them, (easy enough), the partitioning and formatting could not be simpler or faster. It shows a pie chart of your drive and you add slices of pie as your partition sizes are shown in megabytes. You can tweak cluster size if you wish or leave it at it's logical defaults. Select FAT or NTFS for the partitions and then press the GO button when you have the drive set up the way you like, seconds later.... it's all done and formatted, amazing!
Disk Wizard comes in two formats, a Windows version and a floppy disk version. I keep both in my toolbox.
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I can't remember exactly how I added my XP op sys to create a dual boot system, but I remember '98 had to be on there first, then I think I ran WinXP setup from within win'98 as you are doing. It would be better if XP were installed from booting up the CD, but I can't remember if it's possible to get a dual boot system that way. In any case, I'm over that now and won't ever go back to using win'98. (though my XP is very Win'98ish ;D )
You say you never had the service packs. Well, I actually downloaded SP2 (it's all you'll ever need) on my dialup..... yup, it was a 2 week marathon affair but I got it here:
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/deta ... laylang=enThis is the complete SP2, no auto updating for this baby!
Burn it to disk and keep it safe. As soon as Win XP is up and running, apply SP2 and don't save any backup files. (it will save files anyway, and clutter the drive with a bit of useless backups that can be deleted!)
The reason for applying SP2 is simple...... it's secure and stable, incorporating several years of updates, patches etc, but it's really a new Op Sys with most of the bugs of WinXP sorted out. I used SP2 beta for a long time until the official version came out, and it too was very good.
If you are really into your op sys tweaking, (or even if you aren't and just want a new, one step installation disk), then check out this tiny utilility that revolutionises WinXP and SP2 into a slipstreamed, customised and personal Win XP install disk. It's called nlite and it's awesome, extremely powerful, easy to use and has the ability to hack Win XP to pieces if you want!
I've been using several versions of nlite for about a year. It is still in developement, but it's beta status is due to it's complexity and compatibility with several op sys's, and in no way reflects any shortcomings as far as the average user is concerned.
Check it out here:
http://www.nliteos.com/Cheers