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One should be a "recovery/diagnostic" partition. Dell does this on all of their machines. It should be a FAT partition, an it doesn't matter if you delete it. Also sometimes they have a special backup ghost partition if you ordered it.

 

If you want to edit them you need to unhide them. Start-Run,diskmgmt.msc, find the partitions right click (unhide) might work for them to mount in My Computer.

Dells dont come with software usually, the 4gig has your os restore and dell extras and the 50mb has some boot back up {censored}. I deleted both when I first got my laptop but I would only recommend removing them if you're sure you know what you're doing and have no plans of dealing with dell if you have os or software problems. All the extra {censored} that's installed from dell as oem can be downloaded from their site and your windows key can be used on a downloaded copy as well.

Dells dont come with software usually, the 4gig has your os restore and dell extras and the 50mb has some boot back up {censored}. I deleted both when I first got my laptop but I would only recommend removing them if you're sure you know what you're doing and have no plans of dealing with dell if you have os or software problems. All the extra {censored} that's installed from dell as oem can be downloaded from their site and your windows key can be used on a downloaded copy as well.

i have the dell XP CD. and where is my product key :whistle:

4gigs = restore partition. I'm assuming (like my Dell) you never received a physical Windows disk? Either way - that drive can restore your computer to factory settings (drivers and all) quickly.

 

50MB = diagnostic utilities. You can select at boot to run diagnostics on your computer - this is the "hidden" partition it uses :thumbsup_anim:

 

If you have MediaDirect2 on your Dell, you also have a 2GB hidden partition for that!

 

Mmmm.. that sweet Dell wasted space. First thing I did when I got mine was nuke all the hidden stuff and install XP Pro (instead of home). If you are uncomfortable with creating your own rescue disks, or don't have a Windows install handy (and you want to play it safe) - keep your partitions. If you want the free space - nuke them! I wanted an 80GB drive on mine, not 72GB (minus, of course, conversion loss from bits to MB), so I reclaimed it :)

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