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climber783
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Posted at 10:14 am on Sep. 13, 2008 |
| Dual boots are pretty simple, especially with most of the newer distros such as ubuntu. There is a partition editor built into the installer so you can set aside space for both operating systems. A couple years ago I was new to linux, and I set it up within an hour fairly easily. |
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espresso8097
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Posted at 3:01 pm on Sep. 12, 2008 |
| It is very easy, just resize the windows partition to a bit smaller and tell it to install in the free space. Ubuntu is easy (Fedora is just about as easy, just the rest takes a little more work). |
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Eclipse2005
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Posted at 2:51 pm on Sep. 12, 2008 |
| I reccomend Kubuntu. It's stable, and resemble's Vista in a way. AIM me if you decide to go Kubuntu. I'll walk you through the install process |
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ampamp
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Posted at 2:48 pm on Sep. 12, 2008 |
| Try Wubi first, then if you like it, install Ubuntu. It's probably the best bet for a new Linux user, it's terribly easy to install and use. If you computer can handle it, download VMware Player, and an Ubuntu image (from the same site as the VMware player), and you can tool around it in through Windows first. |
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drifting
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Posted at 2:45 pm on Sep. 12, 2008 |
| Set off a partition. Depending on your distro, you could just let it run set-up. If you are going to use an Ubuntu based distro, then you could set it up with Wubi, and you wouldnt even have to format or partition anything. |
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Eclipse2005
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Posted at 2:43 pm on Sep. 12, 2008 |
| All you do is install with windows up and it automatically makes the bootloader for you. I have 1 hard drive, split into 2 NTFS partitions. Tri-Booting Vista, XP, and Kubuntu |
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thisisrlywierd
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Posted at 2:42 pm on Sep. 12, 2008 |
| i dont think its that hard u just split ur harddrive NOT LITERALLY digitally lol |
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