Multibooting Linux/Windows
Okay well ive been thinking of doing this for quite a while. I recently tried SLAX linux, i know its a watered down version of linux but i love it and it basically pushed me further into deciding to multiboot both windows and linux on my system.
But i would like to know will doing this affect Windows in anyway? Also i only have one harddrive, should i get another one seperatly for linux? Last of all i would like to know what version of Linux all you people think i should Install,,
Thankz for the help EvilApproaches
You also want to bear in mind that Linux often has difficulties in reading NTFS formatted drives - so if you want to have data accessible for both OSs you'll need to have a seperate partition/drive formatted in FAT32…
This is the only reason I haven't switched to dual boot as I've got a lot of data I'd need to access on both and FAT32 sucks.
scyth3 wrote: You also want to bear in mind that Linux often has difficulties in reading NTFS formatted drives - so if you want to have data accessible for both OSs you'll need to have a seperate partition/drive formatted in FAT32…
This is the only reason I haven't switched to dual boot as I've got a lot of data I'd need to access on both and FAT32 sucks.
Linux can read NTFS absolutely fine. There is also a driver that can let you write to ntfs but its not fully finished and most of the functions are in alpha. - http://www.linux-ntfs.org/
also if you want to access your linux partitions from windows you can get programs to do it. Seeing as i use reiserfs i use a two programs called 'rfstool' and 'rfsgui'. I know that you can get programs that read ext2fs/ext3fs as well.
Also i have a fat32 partition were i keep files a always access from both and it works absolutely fine.
Yeah;
I have SuSe 10.0 and Win XP MCE 05 on my pc and xp on laptop. Dual booting is fine. May I suggest only 20 gb's of HD space for linux b/c it has alot of small programs and you can get used to it more and not loose alot of data you have already. =P If you need partitionmagic I have a copy; pm me.
SwiftNomad
Well I have Ubuntu system, I dual booted by using this tutorial http://wiki.ubuntu.com/WindowsDualBootHowTo
Hope this Helps, I don't know much about linux but i think this is what you are looking for.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-6104490811311898236&q
I run Dual boot, SuSE Pro 9.3 and Windows XP Pro.
What you do is you set up an NTFS drive of say 25% of your drive space (depending on size of drive, I suggest 16-20GB) for your Windows Boot Partition. Set Up a Drive of similar size for your Linux Boot Partition (seperated into /, /boot, /var, /root and so on.) This will give you about 50% left that you set up to be a FAT32 (Yes it does suck but so does Windows and not sharing the NTFS Code) and use that for files and what have you.
Remember INSTALL WINDOWS FIRST!!!