ChatterBank20 mins ago
Windows 10
I am continually getting a box with the words P:\
And underneath that is a message 'The Directory name is Invalid'
I have 4 Hard Drives split into various but not of them is P! In fact the last drive letter I have on the computer is 'I' which is an SSD I recently installed with the intent (eventually) to become the C drive.
In trying to find Directory P I have been singularly unsuccessful! Any ideas how to rid my system of this problem would be greatly appreciated.
I am using Windows 10 with the latest update. B
And underneath that is a message 'The Directory name is Invalid'
I have 4 Hard Drives split into various but not of them is P! In fact the last drive letter I have on the computer is 'I' which is an SSD I recently installed with the intent (eventually) to become the C drive.
In trying to find Directory P I have been singularly unsuccessful! Any ideas how to rid my system of this problem would be greatly appreciated.
I am using Windows 10 with the latest update. B
Answers
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http:// www.tom shardwa re.co.u k/forum /id-276 0089/di rectory -invali d.html
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You never will find a P drive because the computer is telling it that a program running is looking for it and can't find it. In other words, it does not exist.
There is clearly some program running in the background (automatic backup? or similar) which is looking for the P drive. A solution would be to create a new, very small partition, label it as the P drive and the problem will either go away or tell you it can't find a directory within the P drive. That might give you a clue as to what background program is trying to access the non-existent drive P.
There is clearly some program running in the background (automatic backup? or similar) which is looking for the P drive. A solution would be to create a new, very small partition, label it as the P drive and the problem will either go away or tell you it can't find a directory within the P drive. That might give you a clue as to what background program is trying to access the non-existent drive P.
Hard disks, USB drives, SD cards — anything with storage space must be partitioned. An unpartitioned drive can’t be used until it contains at least one partition, but a drive can contain multiple partitions.
If you partition a HARD DRIVE, the first partitions perform better than the last ones because they're situated at the outermost tracks which have the highest transfer rates. People often do this to make sure, for example, that the OS is located on the fasted part of the hard drive. But SSDs have the same transfer rates for all sectors, so this does not apply to them. There's no reason to partition an SSD in the hopes that you can get better performance out of one partition than another.
If you partition a HARD DRIVE, the first partitions perform better than the last ones because they're situated at the outermost tracks which have the highest transfer rates. People often do this to make sure, for example, that the OS is located on the fasted part of the hard drive. But SSDs have the same transfer rates for all sectors, so this does not apply to them. There's no reason to partition an SSD in the hopes that you can get better performance out of one partition than another.