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Technology Stocks : Windows 7
MSFT 459.86+0.7%Jan 16 9:30 AM EST

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To: PMS Witch who wrote (31)5/16/2009 5:19:03 PM
From: PMS Witch  Read Replies (1) of 152
 
Continuing investigation into Windows 7 Virtual Machine XP. . .

While working in Virtual XP Windows Explorer, I right-clicked on the "C" drive and selected properties. It indicated 137GB free! That's odd. The VHD (Virtual Hard Drive) is in a 20GB volume with about 5GB free. Where does the extra 132GB come from?

My husband suggested I copy a 100GB file to my Virtual XP drive. A file that large would be easy to locate. I followed his suggestion. During the copy, I used Windows 7 to monitor my disks. As the VHD filled, it would expand by 1GB increments. As it reached 5GB, Virtual XP continued to insist that well over 100GB remained available.

Then the Virtual XP window lost colour. It turned grey and stopped responding. I closed it. When I tried to re-open Virtual XP, it wouldn't.

My quick fix was to restore the VHD file from a backup. That did the trick.

I'm left wondering where Virtual XP gets disk capacity values from. Are they generated randomly?

Cheers, PW.

P.S. I also tried out Bit Locker to Go on a USB flash drive. What a painful experience. Granted, my flash drive must be the slowest one ever made, so I can't blame Bit Locker totally. However, I can't imagine employees following company guidelines for data safety unless they're chained by both ankles. (Only by one ankle wouldn't be sufficient.)

At least Windows 7 gives a warning that the process may take some time. It's like the dentist saying "You may experience some discomfort," an understatement.
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