Your D drive is probably just a restore disk, so what's up with that?
But MAYBE, you have set the Windows Virtual memory to use the D drive. It should be using your C drive. Check that out.
Let me think... I think that there is a way to tell Windows to NOT check your D drive status.
2006-09-01 15:48:01
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Defrag the annoying force so domicile windows can fairly inform you what disk area you fairly have. installation and deleting records does not eliminate them from being marked and left on the annoying force. Defrag will optimize the annoying force and flow records over to the factors occupied with the help of the delete records and use that sector of the annoying force. no count if it rather is speaking approximately restoration area are you putting records on the generating facility Default restoration partition d:, do not do this. If this computing device interior of reason new, bypass to menus and discover the only to make a collection of restoration CDs, that way in case you completely crash each and every thing you could placed it back to the way your bought it. in case you by twist of fate lose the generating facility Default restoration partition, you have not got any way of having domicile windows back until the computing device got here with a CD. Too a lot of human beings in no way make an effort to try this and get caught in a rut.
2016-11-23 18:25:11
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Hmmmm
Since your operating system is probably on C, I'd not panic.
Chances are you are saving your music files on the D drive, or some other type of media.
You can go through accessories and use the system tool "disk clean up" for some odd bits or just cruise through your D drive and see what you can delete.
2006-09-01 15:45:19
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answer #3
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answered by wrathofkublakhan 6
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you need to free up some hard drive space. remove unused programs, run a defrag, and get rid of stuff you do not need. That will help you out. I don't know what your D: is, a cd/dvd drive?
You might even want to think about buying a bigger HD if you've used 160 megs.
2006-09-01 15:46:17
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answer #4
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answered by Dirty Randy 6
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Try uninstalling some of the programs you never use. Or take it to a computer maintenance shop to have it checked for viruses/spyware.
2006-09-01 15:49:44
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Check that your windows swap file is not on your D: drive (too small)
2006-09-01 16:20:58
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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throw a delete old game party on your D drive.
2006-09-01 15:47:54
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answer #7
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answered by Nick Name 3
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D is full. Clean it off, or get a new drive.
2006-09-01 15:45:52
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answer #8
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answered by virgoascendant 3
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