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Chapter 259 The heart can't mourn for it

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setting program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk. Set the master disk as the boot hard disk in the "advancedbiosfeatures" option. After saving the settings, restart the hard disk drive letters will be arranged in the order of partitions of the master and slave disks. The disadvantage of this method is that the slave disk can only be used normally in indos, and the slave disk cannot be recognized in pure dos mode.

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

Repartition

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

This *** book starts with the first ****** post.

After converting the partition format, upgrading the computer, using the virtual optical drive, and installing many hard drives..., there may be chaos in the disk letters. How should you "get it right" in the face of this phenomenon? I believe the few methods provided below in this article will help you.

Blocking hard disk method

Set the master-slave relationship between the two hard disks and connect them correctly, then turn on the computer and enter the bios setup program. Set the slave disk parameter item to "none" in the "standardcmosfeatures" option to block the slave disk.

After setting up the master-slave relationship and correctly connecting the hard disk, use any partitioning software to divide the slave disk into logical partitions, and the drive letters of the slave disk will be arranged behind the master disk in order. This *** book starts with the first post of the ***.

Dada is typing, and will be changed back to the main text in the morning

Repartition
Chapter completed!
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