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New Install Advice

  Date: Jan 03    Category: Unix / Linux / Ubuntu    Views: 253
  

I'm a new user of Ubuntu. I've previously been using Ubuntu installed
via Wubi, most of you should know what this is. If you don't goto
www.wubi-installer.com to read up on it. Well, after tinkering with
it for a while and then later looking at the LiveCD of Ubuntu I
downloaded I'm wondering if a few things were left out of the
installation Wubi created. For instance, I tried to install the new
Nvidia drivers but my Wubi installed OS did have the gcc header files.

Anyway, I'm thinking I'll need to install Ubuntu the old fashioned way
but I'm not familiar with Linux's partitioning tools that much. I
have files on my NTFS partition I CANNOT loose and would like advice
on how to resize my partition safely so I can install Ubuntu and then
set it up so I can boot into Ubuntu by selecting it from the Boot Menu
like I could with the Wubi install.

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4 Answers Found

 
Answer #1    Answered On: Jan 03    

What are you dual booting with?

 
Answer #2    Answered On: Jan 03    

If you want to "play" with Linux/Ubuntu get another computer, or at least
another hard drive.

There is NO way to resize a partition SAFELY.

 
Answer #3    Answered On: Jan 03    

Linux is so different to windoze.
Testing or "play" on another computer with a blank hard drive is a MUST
to avoid disappointment. I've been a couple of months at it and still
don't feel ready to transfer over from my windoze machine - getting
close mind!

 
Answer #4    Answered On: Jan 03    

When getting into Linux I did like Jim and James talk about.

I purchased a second hard drive to LEARN on. To make it easier to
change from one drive to the other I also purchased a "mobile rack".
TigerDirect and NewEgg, among others sells them.

This consist of two pieces:
1) The part that screws, bolts or otherwise, attaches permanitly in
the computer, the receiving frame.
2) The part that the hard drive fits into, the drive carrier. You
need one of these for each hard drive.

Now with the frame in the computer and each hard drive in a carrier,
slide the hard drive you want to use into the frame/computer and
boot-up.

The carriers have to match the type of hard drive, IDE, SATA, SCSI
and so on. The frame I purchases has a fan. Don't know if it is
needed but when the hard drive is in the carrier it is enclosed in
yet another container. It could get too hot in there.

Now I can go from Windows 2000 to Ubuntu in just a few minutes and
one operating system cannot screw up the other.

Although the drives are different sizes and different manufactures,
when changing drives I do not have to reconfigure the hard drive
settings done at power-up.

 
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