Windows 10 MBR/GPT
Windows 10 MBR/GPT
During setup, the preview failed to install on a physical drive at the selection screen. The error indicated it needed GPT support. Switching to GPT resolved the issue and allowed successful installation.
I haven't tried Windows 10 yet, but I've worked with MBR/GPT setups a lot. It's doable to switch from MBR to GPT without losing files. I hope Windows 10 supports GPT, which would simplify things. I'm not concerned about Microsoft's plans—it sounds like the conversion would be part of the regular release. They probably won't include it in a preview since they don't want people using old partitions. If it's GPT, we should see it in the consumer version, and knowing Microsoft—we'll never find out when or how the conversion happens during installation.
MBR storage units can be transformed into GPT, yet GPT cannot revert to MBR without a full erase. A complete reset of the drive is necessary. During UEFI boot, the HDD is set up as GPT automatically. If you start in non-UEFI mode, you can keep using the old MBR setup. Drives supporting 3TB of OS need GPT, while MBR is affected by losing roughly 700GB of capacity.
Your motherboard’s BIOS will assign your storage to MBR, while GPT is unknown to it. If it uses UEFI, it will assign your drive to GPT. For older systems that combine both, MBR is used. Though you can change from MBR to GPT and vice versa, you’ll lose the third boot partition that Windows needs for GPT, which is required for full UEFI compatibility. If you plan to switch to UEFI because your hardware supports it and you need a boot time of about six seconds, you’ll have to reformat and reinstall.
Windows 10 remains available in a 32-bit version, which seems secure. Many users still rely on BIOS systems rather than 32-bit CPUs, or require 32-bit support for specific drivers or older applications. Generally, people like myself, who run on early Core i3/i5/i7 processors, depend on BIOS-based setups or custom BIOS/EFI configurations for better HDD compatibility. Sandy Bridge (second generation Core i3/i5/i7) offers a blend of both, along with UEFI, though full functionality is limited. Newer systems should be built on fully supported UEFI motherboards.