Chaque jour, nous vous offrons des logiciels sous licence GRATUITS que vous devriez autrement payer!

IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro 2.6.0 Giveaway
$49.99
EXPIRÉ

Giveaway of the day — IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro 2.6.0

Redimensionne partitions d'espace sans reformatage de disque et réinstaller OS
$49.99 EXPIRÉ
Note des utilisateurs: 156 1 commentaires

L'offre gratuite du jour pour IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro 2.6.0 était valable le 27 janvier 2016!

Offre gratuite du jour
$29.95
GRATUIT aujourd’hui
Convert DVD to Video/Audio in 180+ formats!

Besoin de redimensionner des partitions sans reformater le disque? Essayez IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro pour redimensionner des partitions d'espace sans reformater le disque, réinstaller OS, et ne pas vous déranger plus lorsque vous devrez transférer des grandes quantités de données d'un endroit à un autre. Partition Resizer Pro développé par IM-Magic Inc. est sur à 100% pour le redimensionnement, la redistribution de l'espace du disque, et possède une interface intuitive.

Configuration minimale:

Windows 2000/ XP/ Vista/ 7/ 8/ 10 (x32/x64); Hard Disk: at least 100 MB hard drive space; CPU: at least with X86 or compatible CPU with main frequency 500 MHz; RAM: minimum 512MB system memory

Éditeur:

IM-Magic Inc.

Page web:

http://www.resize-c.com/pro/

Taille du fichier:

8.31 MB

Prix:

$49.99

Commentaires sur IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro 2.6.0

Thank you for voting!
Please add a comment explaining the reason behind your vote.
#1

Trojan.Agent découvert par Malwarebytes au lancement du programme juste après l'installation !!! Désinstallation immédiate et gros manque de confiance qui se crée envers GOTD... ... ...

Réponse   |   nono  –  8 years ago  –  Avez-vous trouver ce commentaire utile ? oui | non (+1)
Ajouter un commentaire
Top commentaires en anglais
#5

I've used various free and paid partition managers over the years in Windows and Linux. Many free partition manager can do the same as today's giveaway. Some of them even provide more functions than today's giveaway. I will stick with what works for me as well as is free forever, not only free today. My top 2 choice are:
#1 AOMEI Partition Manager Free: http://www.disk-partition.com/free-partition-manager.html
#2 GParted: http://gparted.org

Zbigniew  –  8 years ago  –  Avez-vous trouver ce commentaire utile ? oui | non (+39)
#4

I already had this as I got the same version as a giveaway a few months.

It works as stated, but you can do a lot more with other patitioning software, e.g. from EaseUS of AOMEI. As a result you might want to give this is a miss, if you've already got some partioning software installed.

Roger  –  8 years ago  –  Avez-vous trouver ce commentaire utile ? oui | non (+31)
#3

Why you may want to grab IM-Magic Partition Resizer Pro.

If you're running 7 on a MBR hard drive you likely have a hidden partition with some boot files & the system partition where Windows lives. In that case you can partition your drive once when you set it up, & done -- it's not even necessary to know what you'll put on what partition initially, dividing the drive into easily managed chunks or portions that you can fill up later on.

With 8/8.1 things got more complicated... The recommended setup was to use a GPT disk [rather than MBR], which uses a hidden partition for the drive tables that a MBR disk stores on a very small, hidden portion of the drive storage area. There might be a hidden partition for Microsoft files [like the stuff for BitLocker], a recovery partition where Windows setup files were stored, & a manufacturer might add one or two partitions, &/or use the recovery partition. 3rd party software, installed by you or the manufacturer, might also create a hidden partition to store backup data.

If that wasn't already enough of a mess, along comes Windows 10. Much like 8, by default installation gives you 4 partitions [boot files, Microsoft, system, &recovery] -- 5 if you count the GPT partition, which may or may not show up in your partitioning or backup software. So how did 10 complicate things, since that looks the same as Windows 8/8.1?...

Major updates in 10 [like November, 2015's v.1511] reinstall or replace the existing 10 installation rather than patch it. And since that Recovery partition may include non-Microsoft stuff, that *may* create another Recovery partition. It's possible that you can have extra partitions if you're trying a fresh install over an existing 10 install without wiping the disk -- newer versions of win10 add partitions in a different order. You may also have problems with the partition holding the boot files, e.g. the update may not properly install saying that partition's too small [whether it is or isn't], or may screw up those files. Worse, if you have Windows 10 Home, if that update doesn't work, soon after it reverts back to your old installation, it'll try & install the update all over again.

Now partition software won't solve all those potential woes, but it helps. You likely will need to use Windows DiskPart to add a driver letter to hidden partitions to work with them -- something I'd sure like to see partitioning apps add to their capabilities -- but once that's done you can usually work with them. And you will need a partitioning app if you want to reclaim the space from an old unused partitions. I've also seen backup software that when you restore a full disk backup image add tiny partitions between the main partitions that you want/need.

Why more than one partition app?... One, you never know when a Windows change [update] will break a partition app. Two, some giveaway apps lose their activation -- I've had this happen with EaseUS & AOMEI. Three, while I've had the first two happen with 7, if you update 10 to a new version, there's no guarantee Any software will keep it's activation.

mike  –  8 years ago  –  Avez-vous trouver ce commentaire utile ? oui | non (+31)
#2

Windows has its own Partition Software, so its useless

rewgerg  –  8 years ago  –  Avez-vous trouver ce commentaire utile ? oui | non (-29)

rewgerg
It's not if you need to resize a woring partition or merge 2 where there's data in between. Windows cannot do that

MM  –  8 years ago  –  Avez-vous trouver ce commentaire utile ? oui | non (+20)
#1

Several years ago, partitioning tools were commercial software, and some were quite expensive. Recently companies like 'Aomei' and 'EaseUS' have given us free tools. This sector of the software industry is quite competitive.
Again, several years ago, most PCs had one hard drive (20 MB?) so partitions weren't strictly necessary. Some people liked a D drive for documents, E drive for games, F for movies, etc. As hard drive space has increased, and operating systems have got more 'closed' (most users shove files on their desktop or 'my documents') sectioning a disk into partitions has fallen by the wayside.
I would recommend most users should partition their drives into at least two partitions - a system partition for the operating system (drive C) and documents (drive D). This allows the operating system to be backed up via partition imaging tools such as Aomei Backupper (excellent software) without the bloat of movies, downloads, etc, which would be backed up independently. Again, nothing much went wrong with Windows 3.1 or Windows 95. However, these days, a Windows Update can easily knobble a PC so regular backups are HIGHLY recommended.
So, every user should have a partition manager in their toolbox. Most are as good as each other - so long as you can cut a partition in half, merge partitions or move them, they are the key functions. The primary thing to look at is are the programs regularly updated? The 'big guns' like Aomei and EaseUS release new versions quite regularly to keep up with each other - they don't want to be left behind.
Todays software is free, so not to be sniffed at. IM is a good brand - not as low as 'Morning Flake' if you're looking at cereals, but not as good as 'Kelloggs'.

Chris Locke  –  8 years ago  –  Avez-vous trouver ce commentaire utile ? oui | non (+20)

offres du jour pour iPhone »

Cafe - pizza, burger, sushi Giveaway
Earn coins and upgrade your cafe in three stages,.
$4.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
World Rally Cross - Rally Race Giveaway
World Rally Cross is the most authentic, challenging and thrilling rally game ever made.
$3.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
PDF Signer app Giveaway
PDF Signer allows building forms on top of a PDF and fill out collections easily.
$0.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
Progress - Kitten help goal. Giveaway
Progress: Managing Task Progress and Food Inventory.
$0.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
AfroCharts Giveaway
AfroCharts is for the love of African music.
$3.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour

offres du jour pour Android »

Sound Meter - Decibel Meter Giveaway
The sound meter Pro app uses your microphone to measure noise volume in decibels(dB).
$2.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
SPHAZE: Sci-fi puzzle game Giveaway
In SPHAZE, you will manipulate impossible mazes and guide mysterious robots through stunningly beautiful worlds.
$2.49 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
Buff Knight Advanced Giveaway
Buff Knight Advanced is a 2D Pixel RPG where a player's character is constantly on the move.
$1.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
Bricks Crash Giveaway
Your goal is to break bricks on the board, scoring as many points as possible.
$0.99 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour
Fractal Space HD Giveaway
HD Edition: 5 Exclusive Legendary Taser Colors, 4K Resolution, HD textures and dynamic lighting!
$2.49 ➞ logiciel gratuit du jour