Please recommend partition sizes for my dual-boot configuration (1TB, big NTFS partition, big apps)

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It's the first time I install Ubuntu. I need some advise to plan a good partition strategy for a Ubuntu (12.04) + Windows7 (64bit) system.



  • I have 1TB Hard disk, 8GB RAM.

  • I'd like to have a big partition NTFS to share data between the two OS

  • I often use a lot of (big) apps. (So my partition Widows C: must takes about 150GB)

What is the partition size should I put for root and home?



  • / (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /home (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /swap (16GB)

  • Windows (150GB)

  • ShareDriver (NTFS Max Left Space)

If I install and use a lot of apps, will the 20GB be too small for root and /home? will it quickly be filled up over time?



I've never used Ubuntu, so I have no ideas what is the reasonable numbers in my case.



Please help.



Thanks










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  • 1




    beware of sharing a file system between Operating systems, and hibernating. Also consider using VirtualBox instead of dual boot.
    – ctrl-alt-delor
    Jul 16 '12 at 13:44










  • Visual Studio + Photoshop are too heavy on a virtual machine => Virtual Box cannot replace the real one with dual boot.
    – Hiep
    Mar 5 '13 at 15:11














up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1












It's the first time I install Ubuntu. I need some advise to plan a good partition strategy for a Ubuntu (12.04) + Windows7 (64bit) system.



  • I have 1TB Hard disk, 8GB RAM.

  • I'd like to have a big partition NTFS to share data between the two OS

  • I often use a lot of (big) apps. (So my partition Widows C: must takes about 150GB)

What is the partition size should I put for root and home?



  • / (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /home (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /swap (16GB)

  • Windows (150GB)

  • ShareDriver (NTFS Max Left Space)

If I install and use a lot of apps, will the 20GB be too small for root and /home? will it quickly be filled up over time?



I've never used Ubuntu, so I have no ideas what is the reasonable numbers in my case.



Please help.



Thanks










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    beware of sharing a file system between Operating systems, and hibernating. Also consider using VirtualBox instead of dual boot.
    – ctrl-alt-delor
    Jul 16 '12 at 13:44










  • Visual Studio + Photoshop are too heavy on a virtual machine => Virtual Box cannot replace the real one with dual boot.
    – Hiep
    Mar 5 '13 at 15:11












up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
5
down vote

favorite
1






1





It's the first time I install Ubuntu. I need some advise to plan a good partition strategy for a Ubuntu (12.04) + Windows7 (64bit) system.



  • I have 1TB Hard disk, 8GB RAM.

  • I'd like to have a big partition NTFS to share data between the two OS

  • I often use a lot of (big) apps. (So my partition Widows C: must takes about 150GB)

What is the partition size should I put for root and home?



  • / (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /home (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /swap (16GB)

  • Windows (150GB)

  • ShareDriver (NTFS Max Left Space)

If I install and use a lot of apps, will the 20GB be too small for root and /home? will it quickly be filled up over time?



I've never used Ubuntu, so I have no ideas what is the reasonable numbers in my case.



Please help.



Thanks










share|improve this question















It's the first time I install Ubuntu. I need some advise to plan a good partition strategy for a Ubuntu (12.04) + Windows7 (64bit) system.



  • I have 1TB Hard disk, 8GB RAM.

  • I'd like to have a big partition NTFS to share data between the two OS

  • I often use a lot of (big) apps. (So my partition Widows C: must takes about 150GB)

What is the partition size should I put for root and home?



  • / (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /home (??? -> 20GB?)

  • /swap (16GB)

  • Windows (150GB)

  • ShareDriver (NTFS Max Left Space)

If I install and use a lot of apps, will the 20GB be too small for root and /home? will it quickly be filled up over time?



I've never used Ubuntu, so I have no ideas what is the reasonable numbers in my case.



Please help.



Thanks







installation partitioning






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edited Jul 16 '12 at 11:57









ish

113k27256290




113k27256290










asked Jul 16 '12 at 10:39









Hiep

127118




127118







  • 1




    beware of sharing a file system between Operating systems, and hibernating. Also consider using VirtualBox instead of dual boot.
    – ctrl-alt-delor
    Jul 16 '12 at 13:44










  • Visual Studio + Photoshop are too heavy on a virtual machine => Virtual Box cannot replace the real one with dual boot.
    – Hiep
    Mar 5 '13 at 15:11












  • 1




    beware of sharing a file system between Operating systems, and hibernating. Also consider using VirtualBox instead of dual boot.
    – ctrl-alt-delor
    Jul 16 '12 at 13:44










  • Visual Studio + Photoshop are too heavy on a virtual machine => Virtual Box cannot replace the real one with dual boot.
    – Hiep
    Mar 5 '13 at 15:11







1




1




beware of sharing a file system between Operating systems, and hibernating. Also consider using VirtualBox instead of dual boot.
– ctrl-alt-delor
Jul 16 '12 at 13:44




beware of sharing a file system between Operating systems, and hibernating. Also consider using VirtualBox instead of dual boot.
– ctrl-alt-delor
Jul 16 '12 at 13:44












Visual Studio + Photoshop are too heavy on a virtual machine => Virtual Box cannot replace the real one with dual boot.
– Hiep
Mar 5 '13 at 15:11




Visual Studio + Photoshop are too heavy on a virtual machine => Virtual Box cannot replace the real one with dual boot.
– Hiep
Mar 5 '13 at 15:11










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
5
down vote



accepted










It's difficult to know these things in advance, of course, so even with the best planning you may need to make adjustments later. However, I'd recommend the following:



You won't likely need a swap partition larger than 8 GB. You have room for it and it won't hurt, but it doesn't make much sense, either, so if I were you I'd keep /swap at 8 GB.



I've had my root partition at 30 GB for about a year, and I'm still using less than 10 GB of it. You might install larger programs than I do, so give yourself a buffer: I'd recommend 20 - 30 GB.



As for the /home partition, that's where you'll store your data and files, including pictures, videos, projects, etc., whatever sorts of things you store and keep. I don't what sorts of things you keep, but in my case my pictures take up perhaps the largest share. Even so, having given myself lots of room (about 300 GB for /home), I have used only about 50 GB. You'll have to decide for yourself, but since you'll use a large NTFS partition to share data with Windows, you can probably get away with 30 - 60 GB for /home, with the knowledge that you might make adjustments later.



As far as space for Windows and its apps, etc., if you think you need 150 GB then that sounds fine. And the rest NTFS to share? That's fine, too. (Eventually you might want to revise that, but it's certainly fine at the beginning.)



You didn't say whether or not you already have Windows installed on the drive, but I assume you do. Windows can sometimes get finicky when being resized. I would recommend resizing your Windows partition first from within Windows itself using the Windows administrative tools, and then you can create the Ubuntu partitions as you install it.






share|improve this answer



























    up vote
    1
    down vote













    the root can be ~50GB and for win 7 100GB is enough. You can always change this after installing the os you need






    share|improve this answer



























      up vote
      1
      down vote













      I've never needed more than 10GB for my root. I install a lot of packages too. To be sure you can give it 15-20gb. Windows 7 with a few applications needs 60-70gb. If you want to install a little more give it 150gb. You said you need this much anyway ;-) For games you'll eventually need a lot more. /home will be for all your personal files so it depends on how much you have. It also stores the properties of applications but that really isn't much. Even 1gb should be enough for those. A rule for swap is twice the RAM size so 16gb are good. If you want to use suspend to disk you need at last as much as you have RAM because it is stored in the swap partition. So for that 8gb will be enough too.






      share|improve this answer




















      • 2x RAM is obselete, 1x RAM is more than enough and even then its just to support hibernation (really, you shouldn't be using swap much)
        – mathepic
        Jul 14 '13 at 19:37

















      up vote
      1
      down vote













      If you want to make partition of the hard disk... then follow instructions given below....



      1. In Windows 8, on your desktop, right click on computer icon.

      2. Then, click on 'Manage' so it will open your computer management tab.

      3. Click on 'Disk Management' now you will see two disks available there.

      4. Right click on (c:) drive and click on 'Shrink Volume' now you will see the new tab 'shrink C:'

      5. There all the volumes given in MB. If you want to shrink 250GB then put 250000 into 'Enter the amount of space to shrink in MB' box then click on shrink button.

      6. After that, you will see your new disk with available space inside the black 'unallocated' box. This available disk space is not usable now.

      7. Right click on that black box and click on 'New Simple Volume' button. now you will see 'New Simple Volume Wizard' tab.

      8. Click on 'Next' again click next now assign the drive letter as you want (the letters C & D are used already so these letters are not available there) and click on next button

      9. Now, in the new tab in 'File System' box make it 'NTFS' and in 'Volume Label' box put name of the disk you want to name that disk(eg. hard disk) and click on next

      10. Now you see your new disk created successfully. Now enjoy new disk with new space.





      share|improve this answer






















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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

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        4 Answers
        4






        active

        oldest

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        oldest

        votes






        active

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        votes








        up vote
        5
        down vote



        accepted










        It's difficult to know these things in advance, of course, so even with the best planning you may need to make adjustments later. However, I'd recommend the following:



        You won't likely need a swap partition larger than 8 GB. You have room for it and it won't hurt, but it doesn't make much sense, either, so if I were you I'd keep /swap at 8 GB.



        I've had my root partition at 30 GB for about a year, and I'm still using less than 10 GB of it. You might install larger programs than I do, so give yourself a buffer: I'd recommend 20 - 30 GB.



        As for the /home partition, that's where you'll store your data and files, including pictures, videos, projects, etc., whatever sorts of things you store and keep. I don't what sorts of things you keep, but in my case my pictures take up perhaps the largest share. Even so, having given myself lots of room (about 300 GB for /home), I have used only about 50 GB. You'll have to decide for yourself, but since you'll use a large NTFS partition to share data with Windows, you can probably get away with 30 - 60 GB for /home, with the knowledge that you might make adjustments later.



        As far as space for Windows and its apps, etc., if you think you need 150 GB then that sounds fine. And the rest NTFS to share? That's fine, too. (Eventually you might want to revise that, but it's certainly fine at the beginning.)



        You didn't say whether or not you already have Windows installed on the drive, but I assume you do. Windows can sometimes get finicky when being resized. I would recommend resizing your Windows partition first from within Windows itself using the Windows administrative tools, and then you can create the Ubuntu partitions as you install it.






        share|improve this answer
























          up vote
          5
          down vote



          accepted










          It's difficult to know these things in advance, of course, so even with the best planning you may need to make adjustments later. However, I'd recommend the following:



          You won't likely need a swap partition larger than 8 GB. You have room for it and it won't hurt, but it doesn't make much sense, either, so if I were you I'd keep /swap at 8 GB.



          I've had my root partition at 30 GB for about a year, and I'm still using less than 10 GB of it. You might install larger programs than I do, so give yourself a buffer: I'd recommend 20 - 30 GB.



          As for the /home partition, that's where you'll store your data and files, including pictures, videos, projects, etc., whatever sorts of things you store and keep. I don't what sorts of things you keep, but in my case my pictures take up perhaps the largest share. Even so, having given myself lots of room (about 300 GB for /home), I have used only about 50 GB. You'll have to decide for yourself, but since you'll use a large NTFS partition to share data with Windows, you can probably get away with 30 - 60 GB for /home, with the knowledge that you might make adjustments later.



          As far as space for Windows and its apps, etc., if you think you need 150 GB then that sounds fine. And the rest NTFS to share? That's fine, too. (Eventually you might want to revise that, but it's certainly fine at the beginning.)



          You didn't say whether or not you already have Windows installed on the drive, but I assume you do. Windows can sometimes get finicky when being resized. I would recommend resizing your Windows partition first from within Windows itself using the Windows administrative tools, and then you can create the Ubuntu partitions as you install it.






          share|improve this answer






















            up vote
            5
            down vote



            accepted







            up vote
            5
            down vote



            accepted






            It's difficult to know these things in advance, of course, so even with the best planning you may need to make adjustments later. However, I'd recommend the following:



            You won't likely need a swap partition larger than 8 GB. You have room for it and it won't hurt, but it doesn't make much sense, either, so if I were you I'd keep /swap at 8 GB.



            I've had my root partition at 30 GB for about a year, and I'm still using less than 10 GB of it. You might install larger programs than I do, so give yourself a buffer: I'd recommend 20 - 30 GB.



            As for the /home partition, that's where you'll store your data and files, including pictures, videos, projects, etc., whatever sorts of things you store and keep. I don't what sorts of things you keep, but in my case my pictures take up perhaps the largest share. Even so, having given myself lots of room (about 300 GB for /home), I have used only about 50 GB. You'll have to decide for yourself, but since you'll use a large NTFS partition to share data with Windows, you can probably get away with 30 - 60 GB for /home, with the knowledge that you might make adjustments later.



            As far as space for Windows and its apps, etc., if you think you need 150 GB then that sounds fine. And the rest NTFS to share? That's fine, too. (Eventually you might want to revise that, but it's certainly fine at the beginning.)



            You didn't say whether or not you already have Windows installed on the drive, but I assume you do. Windows can sometimes get finicky when being resized. I would recommend resizing your Windows partition first from within Windows itself using the Windows administrative tools, and then you can create the Ubuntu partitions as you install it.






            share|improve this answer












            It's difficult to know these things in advance, of course, so even with the best planning you may need to make adjustments later. However, I'd recommend the following:



            You won't likely need a swap partition larger than 8 GB. You have room for it and it won't hurt, but it doesn't make much sense, either, so if I were you I'd keep /swap at 8 GB.



            I've had my root partition at 30 GB for about a year, and I'm still using less than 10 GB of it. You might install larger programs than I do, so give yourself a buffer: I'd recommend 20 - 30 GB.



            As for the /home partition, that's where you'll store your data and files, including pictures, videos, projects, etc., whatever sorts of things you store and keep. I don't what sorts of things you keep, but in my case my pictures take up perhaps the largest share. Even so, having given myself lots of room (about 300 GB for /home), I have used only about 50 GB. You'll have to decide for yourself, but since you'll use a large NTFS partition to share data with Windows, you can probably get away with 30 - 60 GB for /home, with the knowledge that you might make adjustments later.



            As far as space for Windows and its apps, etc., if you think you need 150 GB then that sounds fine. And the rest NTFS to share? That's fine, too. (Eventually you might want to revise that, but it's certainly fine at the beginning.)



            You didn't say whether or not you already have Windows installed on the drive, but I assume you do. Windows can sometimes get finicky when being resized. I would recommend resizing your Windows partition first from within Windows itself using the Windows administrative tools, and then you can create the Ubuntu partitions as you install it.







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Jul 16 '12 at 11:12









            Kelley

            18.6k21626




            18.6k21626






















                up vote
                1
                down vote













                the root can be ~50GB and for win 7 100GB is enough. You can always change this after installing the os you need






                share|improve this answer
























                  up vote
                  1
                  down vote













                  the root can be ~50GB and for win 7 100GB is enough. You can always change this after installing the os you need






                  share|improve this answer






















                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote










                    up vote
                    1
                    down vote









                    the root can be ~50GB and for win 7 100GB is enough. You can always change this after installing the os you need






                    share|improve this answer












                    the root can be ~50GB and for win 7 100GB is enough. You can always change this after installing the os you need







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered Jul 16 '12 at 10:46









                    Remus Rigo

                    1971314




                    1971314




















                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote













                        I've never needed more than 10GB for my root. I install a lot of packages too. To be sure you can give it 15-20gb. Windows 7 with a few applications needs 60-70gb. If you want to install a little more give it 150gb. You said you need this much anyway ;-) For games you'll eventually need a lot more. /home will be for all your personal files so it depends on how much you have. It also stores the properties of applications but that really isn't much. Even 1gb should be enough for those. A rule for swap is twice the RAM size so 16gb are good. If you want to use suspend to disk you need at last as much as you have RAM because it is stored in the swap partition. So for that 8gb will be enough too.






                        share|improve this answer




















                        • 2x RAM is obselete, 1x RAM is more than enough and even then its just to support hibernation (really, you shouldn't be using swap much)
                          – mathepic
                          Jul 14 '13 at 19:37














                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote













                        I've never needed more than 10GB for my root. I install a lot of packages too. To be sure you can give it 15-20gb. Windows 7 with a few applications needs 60-70gb. If you want to install a little more give it 150gb. You said you need this much anyway ;-) For games you'll eventually need a lot more. /home will be for all your personal files so it depends on how much you have. It also stores the properties of applications but that really isn't much. Even 1gb should be enough for those. A rule for swap is twice the RAM size so 16gb are good. If you want to use suspend to disk you need at last as much as you have RAM because it is stored in the swap partition. So for that 8gb will be enough too.






                        share|improve this answer




















                        • 2x RAM is obselete, 1x RAM is more than enough and even then its just to support hibernation (really, you shouldn't be using swap much)
                          – mathepic
                          Jul 14 '13 at 19:37












                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote










                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote









                        I've never needed more than 10GB for my root. I install a lot of packages too. To be sure you can give it 15-20gb. Windows 7 with a few applications needs 60-70gb. If you want to install a little more give it 150gb. You said you need this much anyway ;-) For games you'll eventually need a lot more. /home will be for all your personal files so it depends on how much you have. It also stores the properties of applications but that really isn't much. Even 1gb should be enough for those. A rule for swap is twice the RAM size so 16gb are good. If you want to use suspend to disk you need at last as much as you have RAM because it is stored in the swap partition. So for that 8gb will be enough too.






                        share|improve this answer












                        I've never needed more than 10GB for my root. I install a lot of packages too. To be sure you can give it 15-20gb. Windows 7 with a few applications needs 60-70gb. If you want to install a little more give it 150gb. You said you need this much anyway ;-) For games you'll eventually need a lot more. /home will be for all your personal files so it depends on how much you have. It also stores the properties of applications but that really isn't much. Even 1gb should be enough for those. A rule for swap is twice the RAM size so 16gb are good. If you want to use suspend to disk you need at last as much as you have RAM because it is stored in the swap partition. So for that 8gb will be enough too.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Jul 16 '12 at 11:03









                        André Stannek

                        3,2661736




                        3,2661736











                        • 2x RAM is obselete, 1x RAM is more than enough and even then its just to support hibernation (really, you shouldn't be using swap much)
                          – mathepic
                          Jul 14 '13 at 19:37
















                        • 2x RAM is obselete, 1x RAM is more than enough and even then its just to support hibernation (really, you shouldn't be using swap much)
                          – mathepic
                          Jul 14 '13 at 19:37















                        2x RAM is obselete, 1x RAM is more than enough and even then its just to support hibernation (really, you shouldn't be using swap much)
                        – mathepic
                        Jul 14 '13 at 19:37




                        2x RAM is obselete, 1x RAM is more than enough and even then its just to support hibernation (really, you shouldn't be using swap much)
                        – mathepic
                        Jul 14 '13 at 19:37










                        up vote
                        1
                        down vote













                        If you want to make partition of the hard disk... then follow instructions given below....



                        1. In Windows 8, on your desktop, right click on computer icon.

                        2. Then, click on 'Manage' so it will open your computer management tab.

                        3. Click on 'Disk Management' now you will see two disks available there.

                        4. Right click on (c:) drive and click on 'Shrink Volume' now you will see the new tab 'shrink C:'

                        5. There all the volumes given in MB. If you want to shrink 250GB then put 250000 into 'Enter the amount of space to shrink in MB' box then click on shrink button.

                        6. After that, you will see your new disk with available space inside the black 'unallocated' box. This available disk space is not usable now.

                        7. Right click on that black box and click on 'New Simple Volume' button. now you will see 'New Simple Volume Wizard' tab.

                        8. Click on 'Next' again click next now assign the drive letter as you want (the letters C & D are used already so these letters are not available there) and click on next button

                        9. Now, in the new tab in 'File System' box make it 'NTFS' and in 'Volume Label' box put name of the disk you want to name that disk(eg. hard disk) and click on next

                        10. Now you see your new disk created successfully. Now enjoy new disk with new space.





                        share|improve this answer


























                          up vote
                          1
                          down vote













                          If you want to make partition of the hard disk... then follow instructions given below....



                          1. In Windows 8, on your desktop, right click on computer icon.

                          2. Then, click on 'Manage' so it will open your computer management tab.

                          3. Click on 'Disk Management' now you will see two disks available there.

                          4. Right click on (c:) drive and click on 'Shrink Volume' now you will see the new tab 'shrink C:'

                          5. There all the volumes given in MB. If you want to shrink 250GB then put 250000 into 'Enter the amount of space to shrink in MB' box then click on shrink button.

                          6. After that, you will see your new disk with available space inside the black 'unallocated' box. This available disk space is not usable now.

                          7. Right click on that black box and click on 'New Simple Volume' button. now you will see 'New Simple Volume Wizard' tab.

                          8. Click on 'Next' again click next now assign the drive letter as you want (the letters C & D are used already so these letters are not available there) and click on next button

                          9. Now, in the new tab in 'File System' box make it 'NTFS' and in 'Volume Label' box put name of the disk you want to name that disk(eg. hard disk) and click on next

                          10. Now you see your new disk created successfully. Now enjoy new disk with new space.





                          share|improve this answer
























                            up vote
                            1
                            down vote










                            up vote
                            1
                            down vote









                            If you want to make partition of the hard disk... then follow instructions given below....



                            1. In Windows 8, on your desktop, right click on computer icon.

                            2. Then, click on 'Manage' so it will open your computer management tab.

                            3. Click on 'Disk Management' now you will see two disks available there.

                            4. Right click on (c:) drive and click on 'Shrink Volume' now you will see the new tab 'shrink C:'

                            5. There all the volumes given in MB. If you want to shrink 250GB then put 250000 into 'Enter the amount of space to shrink in MB' box then click on shrink button.

                            6. After that, you will see your new disk with available space inside the black 'unallocated' box. This available disk space is not usable now.

                            7. Right click on that black box and click on 'New Simple Volume' button. now you will see 'New Simple Volume Wizard' tab.

                            8. Click on 'Next' again click next now assign the drive letter as you want (the letters C & D are used already so these letters are not available there) and click on next button

                            9. Now, in the new tab in 'File System' box make it 'NTFS' and in 'Volume Label' box put name of the disk you want to name that disk(eg. hard disk) and click on next

                            10. Now you see your new disk created successfully. Now enjoy new disk with new space.





                            share|improve this answer














                            If you want to make partition of the hard disk... then follow instructions given below....



                            1. In Windows 8, on your desktop, right click on computer icon.

                            2. Then, click on 'Manage' so it will open your computer management tab.

                            3. Click on 'Disk Management' now you will see two disks available there.

                            4. Right click on (c:) drive and click on 'Shrink Volume' now you will see the new tab 'shrink C:'

                            5. There all the volumes given in MB. If you want to shrink 250GB then put 250000 into 'Enter the amount of space to shrink in MB' box then click on shrink button.

                            6. After that, you will see your new disk with available space inside the black 'unallocated' box. This available disk space is not usable now.

                            7. Right click on that black box and click on 'New Simple Volume' button. now you will see 'New Simple Volume Wizard' tab.

                            8. Click on 'Next' again click next now assign the drive letter as you want (the letters C & D are used already so these letters are not available there) and click on next button

                            9. Now, in the new tab in 'File System' box make it 'NTFS' and in 'Volume Label' box put name of the disk you want to name that disk(eg. hard disk) and click on next

                            10. Now you see your new disk created successfully. Now enjoy new disk with new space.






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                            edited Mar 4 '13 at 8:04









                            Kevin Bowen

                            13.9k145769




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                            answered Mar 4 '13 at 7:44









                            Sagar Kanhe

                            112




                            112



























                                 

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