安裝 Steam
登入
|
語言
簡體中文
日本語(日文)
한국어(韓文)
ไทย(泰文)
Български(保加利亞文)
Čeština(捷克文)
Dansk(丹麥文)
Deutsch(德文)
English(英文)
Español - España(西班牙文 - 西班牙)
Español - Latinoamérica(西班牙文 - 拉丁美洲)
Ελληνικά(希臘文)
Français(法文)
Italiano(義大利文)
Bahasa Indonesia(印尼語)
Magyar(匈牙利文)
Nederlands(荷蘭文)
Norsk(挪威文)
Polski(波蘭文)
Português(葡萄牙文 - 葡萄牙)
Português - Brasil(葡萄牙文 - 巴西)
Română(羅馬尼亞文)
Русский(俄文)
Suomi(芬蘭文)
Svenska(瑞典文)
Türkçe(土耳其文)
tiếng Việt(越南文)
Українська(烏克蘭文)
回報翻譯問題
for seagate, use seagate discwizard bootable edition (burn to cd the *.iso) or from a working computer, use seagate discwizard for windows.
or
use third party tools like the free minitool partition wizard bootable cd edition...
You can just use that to go into the OS install and delete everything that way.
this utills can remove all partitions, include HPA http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Hidden_Protected_Area
^ This
There is no need to download any other tools.
Connect just the Drive you wish to wipe and boot from your WinOS media (disc or flash drive)
Once you get here:
http://imgur.com/a/t4IuH
^ those options are revealed once you click Advanced; then click each partition and click Delete. Done! Now power off the system and remove the drive; or go ahead and clean install an OS.
You can learn a lot about partitions from this video, but if a user has a SSD, then it's complately pointless to do partition, unless it to dual boot.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeUM4kR67XQ
Overall, it's not going to matter for gaming, but for booting up a bit faster or moving files this one place to another, this where partition helps, if you set it up to only use the part of the disk to "short stroke" it will boost your read and write speeds, but at the cost of dividing your space.
IMO partitions are not needed, unless you're gonna dual boot, but if not then it's pointless to do it. These days anyone can get a 120/240+ GB SSD, which will just make HDD look like a average fat guy versus the world fastest athlete Usain Bolt in a 100 meter dash, just like this video.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fh28qfWkjhs
The linked picture was a mere example of what it would generally look like to boot from WinOS media and wipe a drive.
Otherwise, this seems like a good tutorial.
https://www.lifewire.com/how-to-wipe-a-hard-drive-2624527
If you have a Windows OS disk
ANY Windows OS
Use that to Format the drive and delete the partitions
All they really need to know as far as getting Drivers; is the models for Motherboard and GPU.