This is Good, first
Tit-Willow, tit-willow, tit-willow
1) Ensure you have OSX installed one 1 partition only (ie you have not partitioned with Bootcamp) reinstall if you have to\n\n2) Run bootcamp\n\nDO NOT PARTITION WITH BOOTCAMP\n\n3) Create the Driver disk\n\n4) In terminal window type ‘diskutil list’, note the OSX disk name.\n\n5) Run the following (the OSX partition, Data & XP partition MUST be in this order)\n\nsudo diskutil resizeVolume disk0s2 21G "HFS+" Data 50G "MS-DOS FAT32" XP 21G\n\nChange ‘disk0s2’ for the name of your disk.\nChange the sizes to suit your disk.\n\n(The trick with this install is to format the ‘Data’ volume to be a format that windows doesn't recognize during install, hence the data volume is "HFS+" volume, trust me)\n\n6) Insert the Windows XP (ensure you have serial number)\n\n7) Reboot and hold down “C” to select the windows CD\n\n8) Install windows (formatting volume to NTFS. Halfway through it will reboot, use the option key as it reboots AND reselect the windows CD.\n\n9) After Windows has installed, swap the CD's so OSX Install Disk is back in the drive.\n\n10) Reboot and hold "C" to boot into the OSX set up.\n\n11) Using Disk Utility (Utilities menu) select the 'Data' partition, select "MS-DOS FAT32" from the drop down and click 'Erase'
To follow up on my previous post, I've found a way to make it work. It's ugly and strange, but still. Here's how:\n\n1. Format a USB stick with a FAT file system (you can use any volume really, but it needs to be FAT).\n\n2. In Mac OS X, set a custom volume icon using the Finder's "More info" window or any tool of your choice.\n\n3. Open a Terminal window, enter "cd /Volumes" and "ls -la". You'll see a file listed that has the same name as the FAT volume, but with a "._" prepended. For example, "._USBSTICK". Copy that file to the equivalent name for the Windows XP NTFS partition, e.g. "cp ._USBSTICK ._WinXP".\n\n4. Transfer the ".VolumeIcon.icns" file created on the FAT file system to the root of the NTFS partition, using Windows.\n\nWith both pieces in place, OS X shows the volume icon on the NTFS partition.
http://www.digitalfaq.com/media/dvdmedia.htm
GettingStarted\n[[OS X]]
Mac OS X is a line of proprietary, graphical operating systems developed, marketed, and sold by Apple Inc.
Tim's Notes
Space
Create empty file named ".metadata_never_index" at the root of the volume.\n(Type "touch .metadata_never_index" in terminal)\n\nThis will stop spotlight indexing of the volume (HFS+, NTFS or FAT32), and will stop spotlight to return any results, i.e. you will not be able to search the volume at all with spotlight. You might be able to search
http://www.bala.com.cn/disc/listinfo.html?artist=%E9%82%93%E4%B8%BD%E5%90%9B
This is Tim, If you are reading this, I'm already dead, I mean, no I didn't mean to say that...