s/Partition Magic/PartitionMagic and add ® according to

http://www.powerquest.com/legal/.
This commit is contained in:
Marc Fonvieille 2003-08-02 20:33:56 +00:00
parent 8491ed513f
commit 93168f8ae1
Notes: svn2git 2020-12-08 03:00:23 +00:00
svn path=/head/; revision=17746

View file

@ -265,8 +265,8 @@
want a graphical user interface. If you intend to install a lot of
third party software as well, then you will need more space.</para>
<para>You can use a commercial tool such as <application>Partition
Magic</application> to resize your partitions to make space for
<para>You can use a commercial tool such as <application>PartitionMagic</application>&reg;
to resize your partitions to make space for
FreeBSD. The <filename>tools</filename> directory on the CDROM
contains two free software tools which can carry out this task, namely
<application>FIPS</application> and
@ -314,8 +314,8 @@
</listitem>
<listitem>
<para>Use one of the tools such as <application>Partition
Magic</application>, described above, to shrink your Windows
<para>Use one of the tools such as <application>PartitionMagic</application>&reg;,
described above, to shrink your Windows
partition.</para>
</listitem>
</orderedlist>
@ -2189,7 +2189,7 @@ Mounting root from ufs:/dev/md0c
appropriate figure and press <keycap>Enter</keycap>.</para>
<para>If you have already made space for FreeBSD (perhaps by using a
tool such as <application>Partition Magic</application>) then you can
tool such as <application>PartitionMagic</application>&reg;) then you can
press <keycap>C</keycap> to create a new slice. Again, you will be
prompted for the size of slice you would like to create.</para>
@ -5065,7 +5065,7 @@ Please press any key to reboot.</screen>
<para>There is also a very useful product from PowerQuest
(<ulink url="http://www.powerquest.com/">http://www.powerquest.com</ulink>) called
<application>Partition Magic</application>. This application has far more
<application>PartitionMagic</application>&reg;. This application has far more
functionality than <application>fips</application>, and is highly recommended
if you plan to add/remove operating systems often. It does cost money, so if you
plan to install &os; and keep it installed, <application>fips</application>