In my experience it is not a good idea to dual boot on a laptop or any other
computer that has only one hard drive.
It is always safer to install second or even third operating systems on
their own hard drives.
If an OS goes down it can take the entire hard drive.
If you do not like the secondary OS(es) it is easier to delete them if they
are on separate hard drives and not lose the boot manager.
If you insist on repartioning your one and only hard drive be sure you have
backed up all your documents and images to CD/DVD and still have the
installation discs for your programs. The Vista tools for repartioning are
actually good for inexperienced users because they severely limit the amount
of space you can take from your hard drive. It is helpful also to label your
partitions with the name of the OS installed on it.
The machine I am writing this on boots to XP, Vista and Win7, each on its
own hard drive.
XP is no longer my favorite OS, although it remains more useful and used
than Vista.
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