What is the best way to install Linux on to a PC, so it can exist alongside a Windows 7 or XP system?
Two weeks ago, I installed Linux Mint 13 on my old netbook, using a USB stick and Mint4Win. After one or two very minor teething troubles, it has worked brilliantly, and I've hardly booted into Windows ever since. Linux does the same tasks ten times faster on the same hardware, and the desktop (MATE) is virtually the one I would design if I was designing my own to order.
It has worked so well that I would like to get Linux on to my other two PCs as well. It is critical, however, than the Windows installation on the fastest PC is not harmed. This is the PC which runs RX2, which is proprietary software for Windows.
You can create a USB stick with the operating system on it using 'Pendrive Linux', but what then? For the netbook, I just used Mint4Win, but I'm sure that is not the best way to do this. From what I have read, for optimum results you need to create separate partitions on the hard drive, and put Linux into one of those.
One of the things Linux does need is some half-decent tutorials. Everything you read tells you to do something different, which means most of it is probably wrong. It appears as though you've got three basic problems -
1) Partitioning the hard drive. How much space do you allow? I've got one PC with a large drive (1TB), and one with a tiny one (40GB). When you've got a large drive, do you split it in two or just create a small section?
2) When the partitioning is done, how do you persuade the PC to boot from the USB stick so that the installation can take place?
3) How do you make sure the Linux operating system is installed in the correct partition, so that the dual boot works properly from then on?
I need to take my time over this and get it right, so any tips would be extremely useful.
SH
Two weeks ago, I installed Linux Mint 13 on my old netbook, using a USB stick and Mint4Win. After one or two very minor teething troubles, it has worked brilliantly, and I've hardly booted into Windows ever since. Linux does the same tasks ten times faster on the same hardware, and the desktop (MATE) is virtually the one I would design if I was designing my own to order.
It has worked so well that I would like to get Linux on to my other two PCs as well. It is critical, however, than the Windows installation on the fastest PC is not harmed. This is the PC which runs RX2, which is proprietary software for Windows.
You can create a USB stick with the operating system on it using 'Pendrive Linux', but what then? For the netbook, I just used Mint4Win, but I'm sure that is not the best way to do this. From what I have read, for optimum results you need to create separate partitions on the hard drive, and put Linux into one of those.
One of the things Linux does need is some half-decent tutorials. Everything you read tells you to do something different, which means most of it is probably wrong. It appears as though you've got three basic problems -
1) Partitioning the hard drive. How much space do you allow? I've got one PC with a large drive (1TB), and one with a tiny one (40GB). When you've got a large drive, do you split it in two or just create a small section?
2) When the partitioning is done, how do you persuade the PC to boot from the USB stick so that the installation can take place?
3) How do you make sure the Linux operating system is installed in the correct partition, so that the dual boot works properly from then on?
I need to take my time over this and get it right, so any tips would be extremely useful.
SH
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