<div dir="auto">I have multi boot since 20 or more years ago without issues. I once had a system with Windows XP, Windows 2000, two flavors of Linux and OpenBSD at the same time. I believe Grub on one Linux was the one managing everything, it was a long time ago... <div dir="auto"><br><div dir="auto">It was not a PoC, it was my daily driver. Ubuntu was my main system, Gentoo was the Linux I was learning, I had windows 2000 since I built the system and refused to kill it and has some games there that lost the installation disk, Windows XP for the new games, and OpenBSD because why not?</div><div dir="auto"><br></div><div dir="auto">I had one vfat partition for sharing files between everybody, it worked. </div></div></div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr" class="gmail_attr">On Fri, Jul 28, 2023, 04:05 D. Hugh Redelmeier via talk <<a href="mailto:talk@gtalug.org">talk@gtalug.org</a>> wrote:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">| From: Gron Arthur via talk <<a href="mailto:talk@gtalug.org" target="_blank" rel="noreferrer">talk@gtalug.org</a>><br>
| <br>
| Thinking of buying a Dell 3571 and making it dual boot with Windows and<br>
| Debian. Main reason for Windows is, I want Nikon's ViewNX software for my<br>
| DSLR camera and can't for the life of me figure out how to run it off an<br>
| emulator.<br>
| <br>
| Does anyone see an issue with a setting up a dual boot?<br>
<br>
The Precision 3571 comes with an NVidia GPU. I find them annoying because <br>
of lack of open source drivers. The closed source drivers work amazingly <br>
well considering that they are out-of-tree. I don't need a discrete GPU <br>
but perhaps you do.<br>
<br>
My computers usually come with Windows. For those computers, I almost<br>
always install Linux without deleting Windows.<br>
<br>
I find it easy to set up dual boot, but that may well be due to lots<br>
of practice. There are often little problems that I know how to deal<br>
with. Here are a few:<br>
<br>
- Windows, by default, potentially leaves the filesystems in an<br>
inconsistent state when it is shut down!<br>
<br>
To fix this, on Windows:<br>
<br>
Control Panel:<br>
Hardware and Sound:<br>
Power Options<br>
Choose what the power button does:<br>
<br>
click "change settings that are currently unavailable"<br>
<br>
Under "Shutdown Settings"<br>
UN-check "Turn on fast startup"<br>
<br>
click "save changes"<br>
<br>
<br>
- how to make room for Linux on the disk. Windows can resize filesystems <br>
but it won't release more than 50%. You probably want more released.<br>
<br>
1. boot a live Linux system and use gparted to shrink Windows partitions <br>
to make enough space. I generally leave Windows about 100G<br>
<br>
2. boot Windows and ask it to fix the filesystem that you shrunk.<br>
(gparted leaves something not quite right but Windows knows how to <br>
fix it)<br>
<br>
3. boot the Linux install medium and proceed to install.<br>
<br>
<br>
Why do I use dual boot?<br>
<br>
- warranty support almost always requires Windows<br>
<br>
- I paid for it, why throw it away? See "Sunk Cost Fallacy"<br>
<br>
- most systems require Windows for firmware updates.<br>
It used to be that you could do firmware updates from a bootable<br>
DOS floppy or USB stick but that's almost dead.<br>
Some vendors support Linux through fwupd.<br>
<br>
- once in a blue moon I have something that I want to use Windows for.<br>
That means I only need to have Windows on one computer, not many.<br>
<br>
Summary: mostly habit.<br>
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</blockquote></div>