APCUG Association of Personal Computer User Groups APCUG

The Orange County IBM PC Users’ Group has an on-line (orocpug.org/online.html) form that can be completed by the reviewer and sent to the editor to be turned into a review for the newsletter.

Are you "review challenged"?

Use this easy online Review Form. Just fill it out on your computer and email it!

Type in your review answers below. Then press the Submit button at the bottom of the form to send your review to the editor.

Fill in the blank boxes to create your review

1. What type of product are you reviewing: software, hardware, book, etc.? If it is software, please describe the general category: graphics, utility, game, etc.  

2.  Product name (version, if applicable)  

3. Product cost, rebates, special offers, etc.   

4. Company/manufacturer's name  

5. Company URL, phone, or contact information  

6. System and hardware requirements.  

7. Special requirements for installing software (such as serial number entries and activation)  

8. What did you like about this product? (Please use simple terms.)  

9. What didn't you like about this product? (Please use simple terms.)  

10. What is your overall recommendation? Should others buy and use the product or not?   

11. I am attaching:  Product picture    Picture of myself

12. Very important! Your name and phone number or email (in case we need to ask you a question).

Also, tell us a little about yourself. For example: How long have you been in the user group, why did you join, what kind of work do you do or hobbies do you have, etc.

Take a look at a review (below) that has been written using all the ORCOPUG guidelines for a good review.  Note:  This was not written before ORCOPUG adopted the ‘fill-in-the-box” format to make it easier for members to review software.

Partition Magic 6.0 does what it claims to do and well

by Lloyd Boutwell, ORCOPUG MEMBER

Printed in Nibbles & Bits, February 2001

As always PowerQuest has done it again with Partition Magic 6.0. It is certainly a pleasure to review a software program that does what it claims to do and does it well. I now own Version 2 through 6 of Partition Magic. I wanted Version 6 since I “upgraded” to Windows Me, which is not compatible with earlier versions of PM because of the DOS thing (some PM features require a DOS-like operation).

I believe that most everyone is familiar with Partition Magic by now so I won’t go into the obvious features but there are new capabilities that need to be recognized.

PM6 was a no-brainer to install; in fact, it deletes earlier versions of PM so you don’t have to bother. I had the opportunity to try PM6 on three different computers. The first is an old 486 running Windows 98SE. The second is a slightly later computer, a Pentium II (266 MHz). The third and latest, at least for me, computer is a Pentium III (600 MHz). The second and third computers are running Windows Me.

Everything went without a hitch on the first computer and I even had the chance to use the undelete partition feature. However, there was a slight glitch with the Pentium II. I found that I had to disconnect my SCSI ZIP and JAZ drives otherwise the computer would lockup when I tried to run PM6. With the SCSI drives disconnected everything went smoothly. It appears that PM6 does not like the hardware combination of Iomega’s BUZ interface card and the removable drives.

This problem also existed with the earlier versions of Partition Magic, so I was not surprised. The Pentium III computer also has a SCSI JAZ drive but the interface card is Adaptec’s 2930 and PM6 had no problems with this combination. I also had an EIDE hard drive connected to my USB using an adapter and PM6 found this drive as well, although it took many minutes before I saw the results.

I almost thought the software quit—it took so long. I was pleasantly surprised that not only did PM6 work with Windows Me but also there are some additional features such as Tree View, Scale Disk Map, and Copy Partition. Tree View is very similar to the view available with the Windows file Explorer and is very convenient if you have more than one hard drive on your system. I have three hard drives on the Pentium III computer and the Tree View quickly showed me the status of all three drives without having to scroll through a list like the earlier PM versions required.

The Scale Disk Map is somewhat of a goody since it just gives you a relative display of each hard drive’s capacity. One of the biggest surprises was the Copy Partition feature. This allowed me to transfer my software system from one hard drive to another.

Although it is not as straight forward as PowerQuest’s Drive Copy or Drive Image, I will not have to upgrade my version 2.0 of Drive Image (the current version available is 4.0).

Suggested retail price is $69.95, or $29.95 for the upgrade. BUT, User group members can get Partition Magic for $30 at PowerQuest’s user group site. Go to http://www.ugr.com/order. Give our user group name and the special code, UGFLYR00, to be eligible for the discount price. You can print the form and mail, or order online. Be sure to see The PowerQuest Bundle, too. It costs only $99 for Partition Magic, Drive Image, Second Chance, and Lost and Found! — LG