Hello Khani.jaan.mikm5,
You are one of the households in the U.S. with children that does not have a life-policy for yourself or your spouse. But why?
Don't worry your not fully to blame. A lot of people don't understand that is as close to a necessity as water should be. It's just something you need but never think about it.
Not having life-coverage could put families in poverty.
Knowing you have the right life insurance policy and the right beneficiaries offers peace of mind that your loved ones will be taken care of properly.
Your Current Policy Advancements:
[$250k in Coverage without an-exam]
-- http://www.trianglecol.com/coverage_policy-567345647.pln
Regards,
Life-Coverage Of America
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-From; TPT Life -115- Clayton -NC- 27527- This is a message sent on June 25, 2014 for khani.jaan.mikm5@blogger.com - Khani.jaan.mikm5 - If you are not the intended please delete this message now. Or if you want to end communication with us go to: http://www.trianglecol.com/gh.u. We appreciate any feedback you might like to give us about your communication settings.
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Okay so i have my old laptop and it barely has any downloads in it but the space is all taken up..? I tried cleaning my computer out by deleting temp stuff and using ccleaner but it only removed like 2 GB
and i think the computer fixer guy downloaded windows 7 on this (can it be removed?)
is there a way i can fix this?
The suggestions above are good...but a simpler solution would be to merge the C: and D: partitions. To do this, i would use EaseUS Parititon Master or something similar.
The hard drive itself is small by today's standards and there really is no point in having two partitions. The E: doesn't really count as a partition and it's something created when installing Win 7 that really doesn't merit any attention. 100 MB is nothing and the partition is just an administrative byproduct of installing Win 7.
You'll find Easeus Partition Master very easy to use. If you start moving stuff from the C: drive, you're likely to run into things much more complicated and problem prone. Most of the stuff on C: can't just be simply moved. Even if you're successful, you'll still be stuck with a much too tiny C: partition. If you do the partitioning, it's simple, straightforward, can be done in 30 minutes time, and doesn't need for you to reinstall or move anything.
Kilroy's suggestion to do a backup is an excellent one. I've never run into a problem repartitioning, but doing backups is an excellent idea even when you're not making system changes, and it's imperative prior to making ANY kind of system change. Kilroy, I'm not big on partitioning a C: drive, but the problem here is that it's already BEEN partitioned, so we need to UNDO that so there's a decent sized C: partition.
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