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Ptedit For Windows

пятница 23 ноября admin 63

Ptedit 64 download. Sep 11, 2017 - This is Pdf files search result,these list files is all releated 'Ptedit 64 download',you can view online or download it (click right and save as),but. Note: the file ptedit.exe can also be found in the utility dos directory on either CD. ** Warning: older versions of ptedit.exe cannot edit the boot record of hidden NTFS partitions. There are several versions of ptedit.exe that identify themselves as 'Version 1.0', so check the file date.

Hullo, My MacBook Pro has three partitions: one for Mac OS X Tiger (Mac OS Extended (Journaled)), one for Windows Vista Business (NTFS), and a FAT32 partition for sharing information between the other two. Problem is, although the shared partition is formatted as FAT32 and Mac OS recognizes it, Windows doesn't see it. What I have to do is edit the partition table directly, changing the Type field for the shared partition to 0B, which is the identifier for a FAT32 partition. Unfortunately, I can't get PTEDIT32 to work as it always gives 'Error #5 when starting PowerQuest Engine' when I try to run it in Windows. Any other way to modify the table? Command line? If you have suggestions for 3rd-party apps and if you know what they are doing under the hood, please tell me as I'd prefer to learn to do the job the nitty-gritty way.

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I'd imagine that (as it was released way before bootcamp) the OS X DVD would not be aware that it is using the two partition maps. When I tried something similar, (triple-booting OS X, Windows and Linux) I used a tool called rEFIt to make sure everything played nice together; it replaces the default bootloader (the thing which decides which OS to load) and can sync the partition maps, plus do a few other tricks. Can be found at: I'd make sure you have everything well backed up, then see if rEFIt can work it's magic and make everything work right. If you image your drive, if it does all go wrong you can just blank the disk and restore it to how it was from the images.

Apparently PTEDIT32 can edit partitions, making partitions that are hidden, visible. My purpose is to take a hidden partition on a toshiba laptop (the recovery partition) and copy it as my hard drive is beginning to fail. My problem, is that I cannot find PTEDIT32 documentation on what I want to change the partition # to. I know that changing it from 27 to 7 would change it from hidden to active - but if I set it to active, I am worried it will try to launch the recovery mode (as that is what it did on a previous laptop) Here is the link I used for instructions to do this on a previous laptop: So how to make the hidden partition visible without it actually RUNNING the recovery mode?