That's what I wanted to hear.
except that my harddrives each came with the computers. Meaning I don't have documentation on them. Is partitioning a complicated process? If not, please explain.
BTW- Is hard drive one word or two? Hard drive...harddrive...hummmm...
Some advice of partitioning.
First, you can have up to 4 physical IDE hard drives on a system (my system has 3). There is a different type of drive (SCSI, or something like this) which allows for more than 4 physical drives.
More than 3 IDE drives is impractical (you might have to do without a CD Drive). It is not difficult to install a second or third drive. On most systems, you have to go into the CMOS setup after installing a new drive (Hit delete when system is starting invokes CMOS setup on most systems).
Once you have data on a drive, you can use a utility called Partition Magic (PowerQuest Corp), which costs about $20-40 American. It will shrink or stretch existing partitions, add new partitions, et cetera without destroying data. I recommend it highly. There may be other similar utilities, but this is probably the best. This utility comes with software to allow you to install & use multiple operating systems, which is a fun thing to do.
A DOS utility called Fdisk is used to partition a new hard drive, and can be hacked without using a manual. Just be sure you know what you are doing before you commit yourself to actually doing something.
Fdisk destroys all data on a drive, so you usually do not use it on anything but a newly installed drive. After using Fdisk, you must use Format utility.
It is generally a good idea to partition drives bigger than 8-15 gigs. It makes for a more organized system, and defragging takes less time. Your drives tend not to fragment as much when you have multiple partitions on a drive.