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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? If you didn't post this question at http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/S...tion/m-p/26285 you might try this: " Q. Toshiba doesn't provide a recovery disk with this laptop and I'm sure not spending $20 to have a "free" one sent to me. I did notice that there's a 1.5 gig hidden type partition on the hard drive. Would this contain the recovery information by chance? If so, how do I access it so I can reload my laptop? A. To load the recovery partition, hold down zero when you turn it on. You can also go to the recovery environment by tapping F8 when you turn it on and going to Repair Your Computer. There will be recovery options there and one is Toshiba Recovery Wizard. If you still need assistance, please feel free to post a new message or contact the Toshiba Customer Support Center at 1-800-457-7777. " "Barry Watzman" <WatzmanNOSPAM@neo.rr.com> wrote in message news:h1k7or$6a6$1@news.eternal-september.org... > Ok, Toshiba A135-s4457. > > Factory setup. > > It has a 1.46GB "Eisa Partition" on the hard drive (no drive letter, > invisible). > > What is it? > > Google search turns up LOTS of people asking this question, lots of > speculation (most of it I believe wrong). Does anyone know? > > It is NOT a "restore partition"; it's too small. The system has a 120GB > drive and with NO additional software installed, it's using 34GB. Ok, > there is a lot of "crapware", but even using compressed files, it takes > about 3GB to 5GB to setup a restore configuration for Vista Home Premium, > this is WAY too small to be a restore partition. > > So, to repeat the question: Anyone know what it is? Apparently, whatever > it is, it is quite common (on other Toshiba models as well as on other > brands of laptops). |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? That is very interesting. [Hold down the zero key while booting; or press F8] I am still inclined to think that the answer is wrong, only because I still believe that a 1.46GB partition is too small to be a factory restore partition for Vista, but I will give it a try. - Bobb - wrote: > If you didn't post this question at > http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/S...tion/m-p/26285 > you might try this: > > " Q. Toshiba doesn't provide a recovery disk with this laptop and I'm sure > not spending $20 to have a "free" one sent to me. I did notice that there's > a 1.5 gig hidden type partition on the hard drive. Would this contain the > recovery information by chance? If so, how do I access it so I can reload > my laptop? > > A. To load the recovery partition, hold down zero when you turn it on. You > can also go to the recovery environment by tapping F8 when you turn it on > and going to Repair Your Computer. There will be recovery options there and > one is Toshiba Recovery Wizard. > > If you still need assistance, please feel free to post a new message or > contact the Toshiba Customer Support Center at 1-800-457-7777. " > > "Barry Watzman" <WatzmanNOSPAM@neo.rr.com> wrote in message > news:h1k7or$6a6$1@news.eternal-september.org... >> Ok, Toshiba A135-s4457. >> >> Factory setup. >> >> It has a 1.46GB "Eisa Partition" on the hard drive (no drive letter, >> invisible). >> >> What is it? >> >> Google search turns up LOTS of people asking this question, lots of >> speculation (most of it I believe wrong). Does anyone know? >> >> It is NOT a "restore partition"; it's too small. The system has a 120GB >> drive and with NO additional software installed, it's using 34GB. Ok, >> there is a lot of "crapware", but even using compressed files, it takes >> about 3GB to 5GB to setup a restore configuration for Vista Home Premium, >> this is WAY too small to be a restore partition. >> >> So, to repeat the question: Anyone know what it is? Apparently, whatever >> it is, it is quite common (on other Toshiba models as well as on other >> brands of laptops). > > |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Barry Watzman wrote: > That is very interesting. [Hold down the zero key while booting; or > press F8] > > I am still inclined to think that the answer is wrong, only because I > still believe that a 1.46GB partition is too small to be a factory > restore partition for Vista, but I will give it a try. > > And if the poster is right, will you admit you're wrong???? |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Somewhere on teh intarwebs Barry Watzman wrote: > That is very interesting. [Hold down the zero key while booting; or > press F8] > > I am still inclined to think that the answer is wrong, only because I > still believe that a 1.46GB partition is too small to be a factory > restore partition for Vista, but I will give it a try. I am inclined to agree with you Barry. The "ServiceV001" FAT32 (EISA Configuration) hidden partition in this ThinkPad T60 is 4.54GB. It is an XP Pro preload (with a bunch of licenced time-limited stuff Lenovo are probably paid to include) *and* diagnostics partition. I think that, going by the size of your partition and considering that you have Vista on your machine, it's likely that your EISA partition is a diagnostics-only partition where you can boot into a propriatary OS and run tests on your hardware etc. Cheers, -- Shaun. "Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchet, 'Jingo'. > - Bobb - wrote: >> If you didn't post this question at >> http://laptopforums.toshiba.com/t5/S...tion/m-p/26285 >> you might try this: >> >> " Q. Toshiba doesn't provide a recovery disk with this laptop and >> I'm sure not spending $20 to have a "free" one sent to me. I did >> notice that there's a 1.5 gig hidden type partition on the hard >> drive. Would this contain the recovery information by chance? If >> so, how do I access it so I can reload my laptop? >> >> A. To load the recovery partition, hold down zero when you turn it >> on. You can also go to the recovery environment by tapping F8 when >> you turn it on and going to Repair Your Computer. There will be >> recovery options there and one is Toshiba Recovery Wizard. >> >> If you still need assistance, please feel free to post a new message >> or contact the Toshiba Customer Support Center at 1-800-457-7777. " >> >> "Barry Watzman" <WatzmanNOSPAM@neo.rr.com> wrote in message >> news:h1k7or$6a6$1@news.eternal-september.org... >>> Ok, Toshiba A135-s4457. >>> >>> Factory setup. >>> >>> It has a 1.46GB "Eisa Partition" on the hard drive (no drive letter, >>> invisible). >>> >>> What is it? >>> >>> Google search turns up LOTS of people asking this question, lots of >>> speculation (most of it I believe wrong). Does anyone know? >>> >>> It is NOT a "restore partition"; it's too small. The system has a >>> 120GB drive and with NO additional software installed, it's using >>> 34GB. Ok, there is a lot of "crapware", but even using compressed >>> files, it takes about 3GB to 5GB to setup a restore configuration >>> for Vista Home Premium, this is WAY too small to be a restore >>> partition. So, to repeat the question: Anyone know what it is? >>> Apparently, >>> whatever it is, it is quite common (on other Toshiba models as well >>> as on other brands of laptops). |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? ~misfit~ wrote: > Somewhere on teh intarwebs Barry Watzman wrote: >> That is very interesting. [Hold down the zero key while booting; or >> press F8] >> >> I am still inclined to think that the answer is wrong, only because I >> still believe that a 1.46GB partition is too small to be a factory >> restore partition for Vista, but I will give it a try. > > I am inclined to agree with you Barry. The "ServiceV001" FAT32 (EISA > Configuration) hidden partition in this ThinkPad T60 is 4.54GB. It is an XP > Pro preload (with a bunch of licenced time-limited stuff Lenovo are probably > paid to include) *and* diagnostics partition. Guess you meant "has probably been paid to include"! snip -- John Doue |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Yes, I always admit that I am wrong once I realize that to be the case. The files installed on the laptop (and I don't think that anything major was added) totalled about 6GB; it's really tough to get 6GB's worth of files from a 1.46GB restore partition. In fact, I am not sure that you can restore either Vista Home Basic or Home Premium from a 1.46GB partition, it comes on a DVD and my recollection is that installation files take up between 3 and 4GB (the backup is of course image based, but there are about 6GB of files in the partition). On the other hand, it's very possible that it is a diagnostic partition. ggwillikers wrote: > Barry Watzman wrote: >> That is very interesting. [Hold down the zero key while booting; or >> press F8] >> >> I am still inclined to think that the answer is wrong, only because I >> still believe that a 1.46GB partition is too small to be a factory >> restore partition for Vista, but I will give it a try. >> >> > And if the poster is right, will you admit you're wrong???? |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Ok, mystery now completely solved (and I was not wrong) First, pressing "0" doesn't do ANYTHING. But I did find out what the "EISA" Partition on this particular computer (Toshiba A135-S4457) is and at least one way of getting into it. On this computer, the partition contains the Vista recovery environment; more or less the same one you can get into by booting from the Vista DVD. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Windows...ry_Environment This environment is on every Vista DVD; and if you didn't get a DVD (e.g. Vista was pre-installed), Microsoft has made an .ISO file that creates it on a blank (bootable) DVD available for downloading. See: http://blogs.techrepublic.com.com/wi...windows/?p=622 The environment on the Toshiba has been enhanced with some Toshiba extensions. It doesn't, however, fill the 1.46GB partition. There is a "Restore" function to fully restore the main Vista partition .... but the restore function is just a way of starting/accessing the recovery DVD that Toshiba shipped with the laptop. As I speculated, 1.46GB in the "EISA" partition is too small (WAY too small) to actually hold the recovery files. That would take more like 4 to 6 GB. As to the other part of the question, why it's called an "EISA" partition: This was answered previously, but back in the 1980's when Compaq and Zenith were doing their own thing to compete with IBM's then-new Micro-channel (MCA) architecture, they came up with the EISA architecture, and part of that was a provision for putting configuration information in a hidden, protected partition on the hard drive. This partition was given a "partition type" of 12H (18 decimal) and called an EISA partition. Currently, it has become common (although not universal) practice now to use this partition type (12H/18D) for manufacturer specific diagnostic / restore partitons, but various disk software (including Computer Management / Disk Management in MS OS') calls a partition with this type an "EISA" partition, notwithstanding that both Micro-channel and EISA died two decades ago [the market ignored both of them and stayed with the ISA bus (augmented, for a time, by the Vesa VL bus) until PCI came along in about 1995]. But partitions with that partition type still get tagged as an EISA partition by various disk software. Finally, all of this is manufacturer (and, at least potentially, model) specific. So none of it necessarily applies to any manufacturer other than Toshiba or, for that matter, to other models of Toshiba laptops. It is definitely clear that at least some manufacturers create such a partition and make it much larger than the 1.46GB on this Toshiba laptop, and then proceed to put a full recovery capability (including either an installation source or an image source) into that [much larger] "EISA" partition. Toshiba, however, still ships actual recovery media with almost all of their laptops. Barry Watzman wrote: > Yes, I always admit that I am wrong once I realize that to be the case. > The files installed on the laptop (and I don't think that anything > major was added) totalled about 6GB; it's really tough to get 6GB's > worth of files from a 1.46GB restore partition. In fact, I am not sure > that you can restore either Vista Home Basic or Home Premium from a > 1.46GB partition, it comes on a DVD and my recollection is that > installation files take up between 3 and 4GB (the backup is of course > image based, but there are about 6GB of files in the partition). > > On the other hand, it's very possible that it is a diagnostic partition. > > > ggwillikers wrote: >> Barry Watzman wrote: >>> That is very interesting. [Hold down the zero key while booting; or >>> press F8] >>> >>> I am still inclined to think that the answer is wrong, only because I >>> still believe that a 1.46GB partition is too small to be a factory >>> restore partition for Vista, but I will give it a try. >>> >>> >> And if the poster is right, will you admit you're wrong???? |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Somewhere on teh intarwebs John Doue wrote: > ~misfit~ wrote: >> Somewhere on teh intarwebs Barry Watzman wrote: >>> That is very interesting. [Hold down the zero key while booting; or >>> press F8] >>> >>> I am still inclined to think that the answer is wrong, only because >>> I still believe that a 1.46GB partition is too small to be a factory >>> restore partition for Vista, but I will give it a try. >> >> I am inclined to agree with you Barry. The "ServiceV001" FAT32 (EISA >> Configuration) hidden partition in this ThinkPad T60 is 4.54GB. It >> is an XP Pro preload (with a bunch of licenced time-limited stuff >> Lenovo are probably paid to include) *and* diagnostics partition. > > Guess you meant "has probably been paid to include"! Heh! Yeah, I tend to abbreviate things I write to newsgroups (unless it's critical info) and sometimes it doesn't come out exactly as I meant it. Oh, about the EISA partition on this ThinkPad T60; I believe that it dynamically re-sizes itself as needed as the software included allows you to backup not only your current OS 'state' (including patches and service packs I believe) either to hard disk or to DVD-/+Rs but also offers a secure, encrypted 'vault' for sensitive information. Currently disk management tells me that there's 675MB free space on the 4.54GB partition. Cheers, -- Shaun. "Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day. Set a man on fire and he'll be warm for the rest of his life." Terry Pratchet, 'Jingo'. |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Barry Watzman <WatzmanNOSPAM@neo.rr.com> wrote in news:h2c083$9fi$1 @news.motzarella.org: > On this computer, the partition contains the Vista recovery environment; > more or less the same one you can get into by booting from the Vista > DVD. > > The environment on the Toshiba has been enhanced with some Toshiba > extensions. It doesn't, however, fill the 1.46GB partition. There is a > "Restore" function to fully restore the main Vista partition .... but > the restore function is just a way of starting/accessing the recovery > DVD that Toshiba shipped with the laptop. As I suggested back on June 23, and could have been confirmed with a simple 5 minute experiment: "Given the size, my guess is it may be a FAT32 or NTFS partition that boots to a WinPE-based repair or recovery environment (although the actual recovery image or content may reside on CD or DVD)." |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? dg1261 wrote: > Barry Watzman <WatzmanNOSPAM@neo.rr.com> wrote in news:h2c083$9fi$1 > @news.motzarella.org: > >> On this computer, the partition contains the Vista recovery environment; >> more or less the same one you can get into by booting from the Vista >> DVD. >> >> The environment on the Toshiba has been enhanced with some Toshiba >> extensions. It doesn't, however, fill the 1.46GB partition. There is a >> "Restore" function to fully restore the main Vista partition .... but >> the restore function is just a way of starting/accessing the recovery >> DVD that Toshiba shipped with the laptop. > > > As I suggested back on June 23, and could have been confirmed with a simple > 5 minute experiment: > > "Given the size, my guess is it may be a FAT32 or NTFS partition that boots > to a WinPE-based repair or recovery environment (although the actual > recovery image or content may reside on CD or DVD)." > > > Like clapping with one hand i tell ya... |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Barry Watzman wrote: > As to the other part of the question, why it's called an "EISA" > partition: This was answered previously, but back in the 1980's when > Compaq and Zenith were doing their own thing to compete with IBM's > then-new Micro-channel (MCA) architecture, they came up with the EISA > architecture, and part of that was a provision for putting configuration > information in a hidden, protected partition on the hard drive. This > partition was given a "partition type" of 12H (18 decimal) and called an > EISA partition. Currently, it has become common (although not > universal) practice now to use this partition type (12H/18D) for > manufacturer specific diagnostic / restore partitons, but various disk > software (including Computer Management / Disk Management in MS OS') > calls a partition with this type an "EISA" partition, notwithstanding > that both Micro-channel and EISA died two decades ago [the market > ignored both of them and stayed with the ISA bus (augmented, for a time, > by the Vesa VL bus) until PCI came along in about 1995]. But partitions > with that partition type still get tagged as an EISA partition by > various disk software. Why have you written the above to look like you were answering the question? -- Adrian C |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? I was writing it to summarize concisely in a single post a couple dozen other posts for the benefit of anyone that might ask the same question in the future. Is that ok? [I really don't care whether you think it is or not] Adrian C wrote: > Barry Watzman wrote: >> As to the other part of the question, why it's called an "EISA" >> partition: This was answered previously, but back in the 1980's when >> Compaq and Zenith were doing their own thing to compete with IBM's >> then-new Micro-channel (MCA) architecture, they came up with the EISA >> architecture, and part of that was a provision for putting >> configuration information in a hidden, protected partition on the hard >> drive. This partition was given a "partition type" of 12H (18 >> decimal) and called an EISA partition. Currently, it has become >> common (although not universal) practice now to use this partition >> type (12H/18D) for manufacturer specific diagnostic / restore >> partitons, but various disk software (including Computer Management / >> Disk Management in MS OS') calls a partition with this type an "EISA" >> partition, notwithstanding that both Micro-channel and EISA died two >> decades ago [the market ignored both of them and stayed with the ISA >> bus (augmented, for a time, by the Vesa VL bus) until PCI came along >> in about 1995]. But partitions with that partition type still get >> tagged as an EISA partition by various disk software. > > Why have you written the above to look like you were answering the > question? > |
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| Re: What is the "EISA Partition" ??? Barry Watzman wrote: > I was writing it to summarize concisely in a single post a couple dozen > other posts for the benefit of anyone that might ask the same question > in the future. Aw well, if that's what you are doing - just make it a bit more obvious!! Incidently not many posters on usenet do that, and it throws people following threads and working out who contributed what to the topic. In the event that someone (maybe myself) has contributed something not quite right, this summary of words *unchecked* compounds errors and may mislead others - or extend the thread in pointless arguments and off-topic discussion AKA noise. > > Is that ok? [I really don't care whether you think it is or not] Wanna write a wiki for the group? :-) -- Adrian C |
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