You should be able to get your Windows Basic installation back by doing what it says to do here.I Upgraded My Windows7 Starter To Ultimate Recently And Everything Was Going Fine, But I Wasn't Happy With The Disk Space Because I Had Ubuntu As Second OS And I Wanted More Space For Win7. ( Ubuntu Was In The same Partition As Win7 C: ). I Searched For Ways Of Increasing The Size Of The Partition But I Didn't Understood Them So I Deleted Ubuntu. The Space Wasn't Recovered (Unallocated Space) So I Still Searched For Ways Of Making The Partition Size Bigger And i Found a Way That Said If You Right Clicked The Gray Square Of Disk Utility And Click a Phrase That i Don't Remember You Can Show the "Resize" Option Of the Partition.i Did That and i Received a Notification Dialog That Said That Said That If i Do That All The Partitions (OS's, Files, And Drivers) Would Be Deleted And I Like A DUMB Clicked "Ok" At Next Restart There Was No Boot Manager, The Boot Just Loaded Again And Again. So I Installed Ubuntu Using a Bootable USB (Current OS) And There Was No "Install Alongside Other OS" Option. I Tried To Run Windows 7 Setup Again Using a Bootable USB, But I Get Stuck at The Part That You Must Select The Drivers Needed So Windows Could Read The Partitions. I Have The CD With The Drivers But i Have a Dell Inspiron Mini 1012 Netbook With No CD Drive So i Downloaded All The Drivers That the Factory Installs From Dell.com And Saved It on A USB But the Windows 7 Setup Doesn't Recognize The Drivers, It Only Recognize The USB But Not It Contents(Drivers).
Please Help Me, I Want To Keep Using Windows 7 And All Programs i Need Windows But It Seems Like Ubuntu Is My Only Option.
Umm I agree to a point, however the part I struggle to grasp is why the windows installer even has issues seeing partitions at all, I mean Windows 7's installer is one of the most simple ever and even has a very straight forward utility built in to erase and format and partition BEFORE you even install anything, not too difficult with a little forsight about expected uses of the space you have available.
As for the drive snap in tool, it again is in my view an essential application, I use it for all sorts of tasks, although to be fair I've never felt the need to resize a partition during use, I tend to do mine before installing windows, which I do often as a system builder.
As for the USB installer problem, what you need to do is get the tool that formats the USB drive as a bootable device, copy the windows installer to that using a friends pc and run direct from the usb pendrive, assuming theres not a partition recover drive with said installer available.
the usb tool itself can be found here Link Removed - Invalid URL
further reading on that topic here Boot From A USB Flash/Pen/Key Drive
Umm I agree to a point, however the part I struggle to grasp is why the windows installer even has issues seeing partitions at all, I mean Windows 7's installer is one of the most simple ever and even has a very straight forward utility built in to erase and format and partition BEFORE you even install anything, not too difficult with a little forsight about expected uses of the space you have available.
As for the drive snap in tool, it again is in my view an essential application, I use it for all sorts of tasks, although to be fair I've never felt the need to resize a partition during use, I tend to do mine before installing windows, which I do often as a system builder.
As for the USB installer problem, what you need to do is get the tool that formats the USB drive as a bootable device, copy the windows installer to that using a friends pc and run direct from the usb pendrive, assuming theres not a partition recover drive with said installer available.
the usb tool itself can be found here Link Removed - Invalid URL
further reading on that topic here Boot From A USB Flash/Pen/Key Drive
Can you tell us how you deleted your partitions? Did you go into Administrative Tools - Computer Management - Disk Management?
In there there should have been a small partition named something like "System Reserved". It would have been the smallest one. Did you delete that one too? If you didn't then you can probably still save your computer. Go to the link I mentioned in my previous post. It will tell you how to reset your computer back to like new condition.
If you did delete that one too then you'll need to reinstall from USB or let Dell fix it.
Can you tell us how you deleted your partitions? Did you go into Administrative Tools - Computer Management - Disk Management?
In there there should have been a small partition named something like "System Reserved". It would have been the smallest one. Did you delete that one too? If you didn't then you can probably still save your computer. Go to the link I mentioned in my previous post. It will tell you how to reset your computer back to like new condition.
If you did delete that one too then you'll need to reinstall from USB or let Dell fix it.
Some of us know what we are doing.I do not understand why anybody who is thinking of installing Linux wants to partition their hard drive at all...
Lol. Good one dude.Some of us know what we are doing.
BTW: sorry for the mini essay Highwayman.
Glad you got it sorted out Clickeee.Thank You Guys i Manage Somehow To Install Windows 7 Ultimate Again, i Installed The Original Dell Inspiron Mini Drivers In Ubuntu Using Wine (i Think) and Then Ran The Setup Of Windows In a Bootable USB and The Partitions Appeared i Deleted the Ubuntu Partition and Convert it To NFTS and Did a Bigger Windows Installation Partition and Now I'm Running Back Again Windows 7 Ultimate.
Thank You Guys For Your Cooperation and Solidary Feelings.
This Has Showed Me a Lesson To Not Mess With Windows Disk Utility.
Regards. Clickeee.