Do you mean physical drives, or do you mean partitions? I've never come across a laptop with two physical hard drives.
If the C and D partitions are on the same physical drive, and the D partition is directly after the C one, then you can remove the D partition (DELETING EVERYTHING ON IT), and non-destructively enlarge the C partition into the space freed up. Exactly how to do this will depend on the software you use; I don't know Windows repartitioning software.
Shelcario said:
Anybody know anything about removing a iso imaged computer operating system from a dual bootable laptop to get the original operating system back?
Possibly. I'll need to know more details. What are the operating systems, and what do you get when you boot?
EDIT: More questions answered
This isn't really a troubleshoot but how would I increase the frames per second generated in a game without lowering the graphic quality or modifying my hardware
Update your graphics card drivers. Stop as much as possible other than the game from running.
Where can I get free music downloads? I need it for my spriting vids, many people dont watch because of no music. Does anyone know where to get free music for download? It doesnt have to be good, heck EVEN the pokemon theme song!! would be ok...
http://www.dmusic.com/ has independent music.
http://www.classiccat.net/ has freely available classical recordings
You won't be able to get free downloads of most pop music legally. Totally unrelated fact ;-) despite its owners being in jail, the pirate bay reamins operational.
Not really a problem, so much as a general computer question. I recently came into a 20-year-old 27' television. I'm considering buying myself a new computer if my grades are high enough come mid-terms (as a way of motivating myself to do my work), and I found an S-video-to-RCA adapter online. Obviously this would save me a lot of money, but I'm wondering if the quality is good enough to warrant me purchasing the cable instead of an actual monitor. Has anyone here used one of these cables before?
No. That old television won't have anything like the resolution you want for computing. If you want to watch videos or play games on a bigger screen it might be good, but for web browsing and office work it won't be suitable.
My computer runs slow, really slow--it takes about ten minutes to get it started up, and then at least four more to run any program on a good day. In addition, it often freezes up if I try to save something in Word, run Shoddy, try to Alt + Tab, or whenever I'm doing anything, actually. I'm also having this problem where my Firewall randomly turns off and updates don't install properly on that or in Firefox (it downloads them multiple times but cannot install them). I also can't defrag it anymore, no matter how much stuff I delete from it.
After numerous scans for malware and viruses I don't think it has anything to do with malicious programs but with the computer itself. My friend suggested that I restore factory settings but I don't have the money to buy an external hard drive to back up my computer. Anyone have any suggestions?
That sounds exactly like a malware problem. Possibly the malware is managing to hide from the scanners. To be honest the only solution I'd use would be a reinstall - I consider a system that's at all compromised to be fully compromised. But archiving your data is a problem. You could try booting a Linux livecd and running ClamAv on your windows partition from that.
It could be due to legitimately installed software that's running (possibly in the background) at boot. But I'd say that's less likely.