Tag Archives: answer

dual vista help?

Thank you for “Linux User” for his very nice step by step answer in this link.

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AokuQmBteAnNGAql3r_lXk4AAAAA;_ylv=3?qid=20071123144448AAj7PGv

But even though he is really telling it step by step, I still get confused. Maybe because I am new to linux and computer, or maybe im cant understand english very well, because im not the genuine user of the language. So im here to only asking him about my confuseness but if the other answerer also want to help me, im really proud.
This is his answer:
•yeah, it’s possible. It’s called a dual-boot. The Linux version I recommend you use is ubuntu. First I recommend you make some restore disks in case something goes wrong. (unlikely but possible)

1.Turn on your computer and wait for Vista to start.
2. Click the start button and RIGHT-CLICK “My Computer” Then click “Manage”
3.double-click “Disk Management” and it will show your hard drive.
4. Right-click your C drive and click “shrink.” It will then ask you how much you want to shrink it by. (Shrink it by the amount of space you want devoted to linux)
5. After you’ve shrunken the C drive, make a ubuntu alternate install CD. Make sure you use this iso and not the live CD:

http://mirror.cc.columbia.edu/pub/linux/…

6. Reboot your computer and boot from the ubuntu CD
7. Ubuntu setup will begin, follow the on screen instructions until it gets to the “partitioner”
8. When it gets to the partitioner, choose “manual” It will then show all of the partitions on your hard drive. Now choose the partition labeled “Free space” (This is the space you freed up in Vista.) Now choose “Automatically partition the free space”
9. Finally click “Finish partitioning and write changes to disk”
10. Now just follow the rest of the on screen instructions and you will have Vista and Ubuntu in a dual-boot
o2 weeks ago
Source(s):
I have Vista and Ubuntu in a dual-boot
First: I don’t know how to make restore disk, can you tell me how?
Second: You said >
“make a ubuntu alternate install CD. Make sure you use this iso and not the live CD:

http://mirror.cc.columbia.edu/pub/linux/…”

What is ISO and what is actually alternate install CD? And what is the live CD? And the differencess between both? Is the alternate install CD is the CD that we burned the program into it? Hope you can explain this.
Third: I have Acer Aspire 4710, the Ram is 1GB, and it is Centrino Duo laptop. But when I purchased the laptop, the seller didn’t give me any CD, even the Drivers CD. Maybe I was cheated by him. But since I bought it oversea I cant go back there and ask him the CDs. So I am not going to setup my laptop for one year until I get back to my homecountry, because I don’t think I can have the Driver CD that I need here, in Egypt. So the question is, after I installed the Linux, do I have to to enter the Driver CD as we do when we do the Setup to VISTA?
So, please I beg you to answer this seriously and carefully because you know that im going to pick your as the best answer. Thank you.
Note: I am using Windows VISTA right now. It is preinstalled when I buy it.
linux user:
you said: “not all computers came with driver cd.”
do you include in your words, laptop too?
ok, i finished download the ubuntu from the link that you have given. so now what should i do?
because you said i have to burn it into alternate install cd, and what i know is if i burn it into a cd, the cd will be called live cd. that is if i was not mistaken.
i need your suggestion, how much space that i need to free in the C to put linux in it? any idea?
right now i still want to use this way, maybe i’ll use wubi installer next time. but if i am not using the wubi installer, i mean using the previous way, do i need the driver cd? because im still not sure about the fact that my laptop came without its driver cd. my laptop is acer aspire 4710. centrino duo.
thank you.
linux user:
how many time it will take if i use the wubi installer?
linux user:
sorry for keep asking. i’ve viewed your profile. and you said “stop asking!”. it really make me feel shy. maybe this will be the last question.
can i just burn the file using the other program? because i dont want to download more, i mean to download imgburn. can i use the other burn program like nero or NTI? THANK YOU.
linux user:
i’ve changed my mind. now im installing wubi installer. and it still on process. after finished downloading it. what should i do? do i still need the ubuntu installed cd or not? the downloading is still running. it is right now 83%.
linux user:
can i use wubi installer for windows xp? because i want my friend to use it too.
i have ubuntu 6.0 in live cd. if i install it to my laptop (vista). will my computer support it? is it going to work?

in nero startsmart,which menu which enable to burn an ISO image on a blank CD to make a booting CD?

>>>>i need your answer a soon as possible because i’m trying now to create a puppy linux CD from a live CD distro….

What is the smallest size linux (choosing a best answer)?

I have an extremely old pentium 3 550mhz processor, with 384mbs of ram and a 20 gig hard drive. I dont know what the smallest linux that doesnt run off a live cd is. I have used slax portable linux but i want a permanently installed os (preferably with a kde interface and maybe looks like ubuntu) and I dont want to permanenly install slax becuase it still functions as a live cd, just running from the hard drive.

So the bottom line is, I need a list of small sized linux OS’s with links to a download. remember, I am choosing a best answer.

Thanks!!

help with windows xp!?

Ok. This is probably 10th questions I ask here on yahoo answers about this problem. Whenever I get answer from folks, they just tell me in ‘general’. This time I want the answers that really work. Here is my problem.

This is a school laptop with windows xp. IT guy just fuck it up for worse. No fucking access even to install flash player. So no YouTube. I got off there and decided to install ubuntu on it. I did it. But ubuntu does not solve my problem either because it just can’t detect wireless network.

Then I tried to boot to windows xp again and guess what? blue screen error comes up. I can’t even boot into safe mode, networking mode, last working configuration mode what so ever. The problem is I don’t have xp cd to recover system which a lot of guys here on yahoo answer told me about. Another problem is I don’t want to hand this over to school IT department to fix because I would probably get scold.

So I would like to know,

Is there anyway to delete linux partition while I am log in on linux(ubuntu). I tried to boot with ubuntu cd but it leads me straight away to installation of ubuntu which mean no command line stuffs at start up. I downloaded many xp live cd from web and tried to boot with it to no avail.

How to recover this xp system? Any ideas?
I can’t boot into windows xp as well.

Will Windows System Recovery remove Linux partition?

It may look long, but this is a very simple question, please, I just need one answer.

I have my reasons for doing a Windows system recovery, and no doing a Linux recovery would not help. Okay, so I installed Linux 9.10 Karmic from the Live CD I got in the mail, and I now have it dual booting with Windows XP (XP installed first). I’m using HP Pavilion a320n with AMD Athalon XP Processer, preinstalled with XP, no installation or recovery disk.

I realized that I can navigate through everything from the C:/ drive to the desktop of my XP partition by mounting “HP_PAVILION” (obviously the hard drive) in the Places tab from within Ubuntu. I also think the built-in Win recovery must be on a separate partition because it shows as a seperate option in the GRUB menu. Because, when I boot windows from the GRUB it doesn’t show the separate screen that prompted me to press F1 for recovery before reaching the splash screen like it used to, and I also remember drive D:/ being a drive in the My Computer folder next to C:/, saying that I wasn’t allowed to browse the folder because it was for recovery purposes. I also realized that I could navigate my Ubuntu desktop and filesystem by going to the Ubuntu folder in my C:/ drive from within the windows partition. So now for the main question:

I want to know if doing the system recovery that came preinstalled on the machine will delete the ubuntu partition and all files on it (because I was also working on a very important project within XP and was planning on copying and pasting the files from within Linux in order to back them up onto my Linux partition, because I can’t buy an external hd and they’re too big for a flash drive).

Will Windows system recovery delete Linux, and afterwards will I be able to boot normally into windows without any boot problems, like will it automatically configure the MBR? Or will is just replace the GRUB bootloader with the Windows MBR, and all I would have to do is use the Live CD to restore the GRUB menu. Because the main thing I need is XP, so I’d just reinstall Linux if it got deleted, but the thing is, I wanted to back up my desktop files onto my linux partition and restore them later. With Windows System recovery actually formate the ENTIRE hard disk or just the Windows partition on the hard disk, meaning I’d be able to simply pop in the Live CD, fix the GRUB menu, and Ubuntu Karmic will be back with all the files I backed up from my windows partition? Or will everything just be completely replace with Windows? Btw, I do believe I resized the Windows partition to about 20 Gigs smaller than originally when I installed Linux, so will this cause the system recovery to resize the partition itself, thus overwriting Linux, especially since I believe the system recovery has it’s very own partition separate from the actual windows partition.

No one is answering my question on the Ubuntu help forums, so I posted this here.