Powerquest Partition Magic 8.0 Full Version Download

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Aug 3, 2024, 3:21:21 PM8/3/24
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PartitionMagic[1][2] is a utility software program for hard disk drive partitioning originally made by PowerQuest, but subsequently owned by Symantec. As of December 8, 2009, the Symantec website stated that they no longer offer PartitionMagic.

The program runs on pre-Vista Microsoft Windows operating systems including Windows 2000 and Windows XP, but the application is incompatible with Windows Vista and later versions (although Microsoft added resizing). In any of these cases, existing partitions can be resized without loss of data.

PartitionMagic is capable of resizing NTFS, FAT16 or FAT32 partitions without data loss, and can copy and move partitions, including to other disks. It also has various other features, including being able to convert between FAT16, FAT32 and NTFS, modify the cluster size of FAT16, FAT32 and NTFS filesystems, and merge adjacent FAT or NTFS filesystems (all without data loss, though some NTFS-only metadata is lost on conversion to FAT). Additionally, it had somewhat limited support for ext2 and ext3 partitions. PartitionMagic was the first commercial product of its kind containing patented technology.[3]

The stable version of PartitionMagic 8.05 also included a rescue floppy disk with an additional DOS version of PartitionMagic. The DOS version (which included DR-DOS or MS-DOS) came on one 2.88 MB or two 1.44 MB floppy disks.[4][5]

The Windows version of PartitionMagic could also be integrated in BartPE (Bart's Preinstalled Environment) a Windows XP based Live CD created by using the PE Builder. To integrate PartitionMagic into BartPE a PE Builder plug-in for PartitionMagic was available.[6][user-generated source]

Once Symantec purchased the application in 2003,[11] there were no new releases, and Symantec stated that it had no plans on releasing a new version. As of October 13, 2011, the Symantec website stated, "Sorry, we no longer offer Norton Partition Magic."

PartitionMagic is a piece of high-efficiency partition management software that allows you to create a partition, delete partition, extend partition, merge partition, resize partition, copy NTFS or FAT partitions, convert file system between FAT and NTFS, change cluster size and so on. It is originally made by PowerQuest. However, it was acquired by Symantec on December 5, 2003. And it released the PartitionMagic 8.0.5 and changed its name to Norton PartitionMagic.

Although there is PartitionMagic 8 available for usage, it is not compatible with Windows Vista and later versions. And since Windows 7, 8, 10 was released, many users shift from Windows XP to Windows 7 or Windows 10 due to their superiority. Thus, a substitute for PowerQuest Partition Magic is necessary. Here we would like to share the free partition manager named AOMEI Partition Assistant Standard.

3. Windows To Go Creator: burn Windows IOS files to USB drive to make a portable Windows bootable device, with which you can boot any computer (even a brand new one) into your familiar OS environment.

4. Make Bootable Media: create a bootable device, which allows you to enter WinPE mode and fix Windows boot issues or perform some tricky operations that cannot be done within Windows, such as format C drive.

With all amazing functions, I believe the AOMEI Partition Assistant Standard is a great alternative when the PowerQuest or Norton PartitionMagic cannot meet your requirements. Most importantly, there is more than one version for your selections. For example, the Professional edition provides more advanced features than free edition; the Server edition is specially designed for Windows Server users; the Unlimited version can be installed onto an unlimited number of computer within one company and the Technician version allows technicians to provide billable services & unlimited for enterprise usage. More details can be got from Edition Comparison.

A tool from PowerQuest, and later Symantec, that enables manipulation of partitions through its own bootable media. PartitionMagic can shrink, grow, or move partitions without the need to backup and restore files in that partition. It supported a variety of file systems, and the core DOS-based parition tool fit on a bootable 1.44mb floppy disk. It was extremely popular, and made installing or removing multiple OSes much easier.

7.0 was the last version of PartitionMagic before being purchased by Symantec, and introduced support for Windows XP. The setup program mentions it 'now' supported 80GB hard disks. System requirements varied from a 486 using Windows 95, through to a Pentium 200 using Windows 2000/XP. CD ISO Contains versions in English, German, Spanish, French, and Italian.

From the first version of PowerQuest Partition Magic to the last version Norton Partition Magic 8.0.5, Partition Magic is NOT free. (PartitionMagic is developed by PowerQuest corporation, on December 5, 2003 Symantec acquired PowerQuest and changed the name to Norton PartitionMagic.)

Some people may ask whether it is possible to build PartitionMagic portable, that means create bootable CD/DVD or USB disc to use without Operating System. After full searching by Google, I only found EXE format portable version.

Even if I missed something and there's a way to build such bootable media that doesn't rely on Operating System, Do not modify disk partitions. From Windows Vista, the boot manager is changed, new file system and disk type is added, so PartitionMagic does NOT support Windows Vista and all subsequent versions. If you modify disk partitions, Windows cannot boot, partition may be damaged.

There are many disk partitioning software that works similarly with Partition Magic. To Windows 10, 8, 7, Vista, XP (all editions) computer, there are free partition magic alternative software. Among them all, NIUBI Partition Editor is recommended by many professionals and editors.

Unlike other free partition magic software that lock many functionalities or integrate advertisements or add-ons, NIUBI Partition Editor Free is 100% free and clean. Except bootable media and 1 Second Rollback technology, it is absolutely the same with paid version. In addition, it provides the same free 24/7 online support.

At that point, partitions didn’t mean a whole lot--why carve up a disk when you could just leave it all together? As drive sizes grew, however, partitions became more and more important. With monstrous 10-gig and higher hard drives populating the market now, multiple partitions are a necessity--I have no fewer than ten partitions on my single hard drive at the moment.

Some people run multiple partitions for more than one operating system. Some people do it to keep those cluster sizes down. A (small, I hope) percentage use extra partitions to keep all their goat porn nicely organized.

But there’s always been a problem with partitions. If you wanted to make any changes at all to their size or placement on the hard drive, you had to back up your data, delete all your partitions, recreate them the way you wanted them, and then restore all the data. I’ve left out the part where you pray to the God of Magnetic Storage that your backup worked properly. Needless to say, everyone was terrified of making any change to their partitions.

This all changed with the arrival of a program called Partition Magic. This nifty little thing did what could never be done before--resize and move partitions around with impunity, all without having to wipe out and restore your data! A miracle if ever there was one. I purchased Partition Magic 3.0 and have never looked back; with all the tweaking I do, I’ve definitely gotten my money’s worth in shrinking, growing and moving around the partitions on my hard drive. I haven’t run FDISK in months.

Just last night, however, Partition Magic 3.0 was finally starting to show some age. For the first time, it just wouldn’t let me do certain things I wanted to do. I had a couple of Linux partitions on my drive. PM was very nice about telling me, "Yep, them are Linux all right." That was about it. I couldn’t move them, resize them, nothing. Bummer. Then there was the fact that my recent Windows 98 upgrade was supposed to let me create FAT or at least FAT 32 partitions past that nasty 1024-cylinder limit (my hard drive goes up to 1200 or something, even with LBA). PM would have none of it. I shrugged and went to bed.

Ah, but today was a new day. I went poking around to see if I could figure out the answer at least to my 1024 dilemma and found a reference to a new version of Partition Magic. Popping on to PowerQuest's web site for more info, I discovered that not only was Partition Magic 4.0 shipping on September 30, but I could download it from their web site today! Well, being an instant-gratification kind of guy, I punched in my credit card info and clicked the button for a download…

It's kind of pointless, really. I don't think you're likely to see any kind of noticeable difference between them. If you have some specific tests in mind, just use boot floppies and get it over with.

But if you really want to go ahead with this, you could probably boot between four different DOS versions at a time. Just set up four primary partitions on your hard drive. Then you can toggle the active partition using GRUB, or just set it manually using some partitioning tool.

For boot manager
Payware
Acronis OS Selector but have install in to Windows I don't know if has dos recovery other then you have LiveCD
Powerquest Partition Magic was best one it dose have dos recovery floppy and can make a boot floppy cd and there can be copy to the harddrive

I remember for one thing that i used to have a hell of a time constantly tweaking config/autoexec in msdos just to have enough conventional memory to run my stuff. Having a multiple DOS setup could be a pretty cool commodity once installed. Anyway im gonna make some tests, some interesting suggestions so far. Thanks guys.

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