I haven't used BootCamp lately, so this might be a shot-in-the-dark, but it's worth a shot. Try inserting the OS X install disc and boot into it (hold C when you turn on your Mac), and select your language. After it says "preparing installation..." or something similar, you should see a menu bar appear at the top of the screen (if it asks you which hard drive you'd like to use for installation, you've gone too far).
In the menu bar, select "Disk Utility" from the "Utilities" menu. Try resizing the OS X partition from there -- but pay close attention to the prompts it gives you, to make sure you don't accidently delete your main partition!
Bootcamp will "Restore your drive" to 1 volume... all Mac OS X it, in one move, will completely remove windows, and the partition it's on. You can NEVER get it back once you've done this be certain you have all the files, from the windows side that you want and as a precaution back up all personal files / important files, on the mac. Open the "Utilities" folder which resides in your "Applications" folder on your hard drive.
Within it, you should see a program called "Boot Camp Assistant" When you run Boot Camp Assistant and press "Continue", it will give you an option to "Create or remove a Windows partition". When you select that it will come up with a window titled "Restore Disk to a Single Volume"- click "Restore" on that window and the Windows related partition and data will be removed, leaving you with a single Mac partition on your disk. Good luck!
Back up your OS X partition (a bootable clone using Super Duper or Carbon Copy Cloner would be best, but Time Machine will do OK, just resfore slower. Then use Disk Utility to repartition your drive into 1 partition, It should be Mac OS X Journaled using a GUID partition table. Once you have done this, you should be able to restore your backup disk to the drive.
If you have used Time Machine, you can also boot from your Leopard Disk and it will give you the option to restore from a Time Machine backup, or running Migration Assistant will also give you the option to restore from a Time Machine backup.
Sorry. You'll have to wipe your hard drive and start over. Clone it with carbon copy cloner or super duper, then wipe your internal HD with the OS X CD (with one partition), boot from the external HD and use your utility of choice (CCC or Super Duper) and clone it back onto your internal drive.
Backup your files and then Re-install OSX from scratch.
There's been a lot written about Apple's dramatic release of Boot Camp, a free download that lets you repartition your Intel-based Mac's drive and install Windows XP as an alternative operating system, but even the magazine coverage I've seen doesn't give you screen-by-screen details. So let's see what we can do about that! Your first step is to make sure you have an Intel-based Mac: any G4 or G5 Mac will not install Boot Camp and you won't be able to dual boot into Windows XP.
You can still run an emulator like Microsoft Virtual PC, but it's an inferior solution and my own experience with VPC has been that it's glacial and useless for all but the most simplistic of Windows applications. You'll also need to be able to burn a CD during the process: make sure you have a blank, burnable CD disk on hand. Now, download Boot Camp from the Apple site and double click on the ".
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