Hi
I run a Dual Boot with Win 7 on my Lenovo laptop, which i recently swapped for a MacBook pro, I want to dual boot the Mac with Fedora 17 - I read an article on a few fixes that were done to support booting MacBooks,
This is a late 2011 MacBook - Intel Core i7, AMD Radeon Graphics
Is dual boot possible?
Following a fresh install of 12.04 on a dual HDD dual boot system first boot brought up Grub Rescue.
I installed Boot Repair in a live CD and ran the recommended repair. Boot Repair indicated a successful repair.
Upon reboot there is no entry for Win XP.
Gparted shows sda as full as it was before installing 12.04.
I've just put together a new computer that I want to dual boot 12.10 and Windows 7. This machine has a Gigabyte 78LMT-S2P motherboard, AMD video onboard, AMD CPU. My HDD is 500GB, so I'm not lacking for space.
I am using Windows 7 professional 64 bit and Ubuntu 12.10 64 bit.
This is my first use of EFI, but I have installed many dual boot systems.
Hi People- I have Ubuntu 9-10 and installed as dual boot with Windows. Working great until I did an update and tried to restart. I can get to dual boot screen but after enter then get grub. No boot Any suggestions or comments?
Dual-booting has always intrigued me. I dual-boot between Windows and Linux on one of my computers, dual-boot between stock firmware and RockBox on my Sansa Fuze v2, and I decided to find out how to dual-boot my Galaxy Tab 2 7.0". It took a couple days of work, but I have found one way to do so using the external SD card.
Sorry if I've missed something in my searches :-(
I've had a dual boot system for some time, with 12.04 on a SATA drive and WinXP on an IDE drive.
I have tried dual booting different version of Linux, the only one that i have success with is Ubuntu.
How to dual boot Windows 7 and OpenSUSE, i have 7 on the first partition, my programs on a second partition and plenty of space for Linux after that but i can't seem to be able to dual boot it so maybe you have some information about it.
Thanks
I got a new laptop which makes my old one with a dual boot of XP and 11.10 redundant. Everything has been moved over and this is a perfect chance to play around with variants. I would like to replace the Ubuntu with Lubuntu but assume that if I just remove the Ubuntu partition to make room there will be issues with the existing grub. Is there a way to do this?
Many dual boot tutorials talk about freeing up space through the disk manager in Windows before attempting a dual boot with Linux --
Out of curiosity I decided to skip this step and just run the Mint installer and let it decide what to do ( Mint 12 / Win 7 ). Results? I'm missing 8 gigabytes of space on the Windows side.