How to Dual-Boot Windows 11 & Ubuntu

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  • Опубликовано: 8 сен 2024

Комментарии • 258

  • @ccroy2001
    @ccroy2001 2 года назад +49

    This was a great video! I've always setup dualboot systems. Jay made all the things I struggled with look easy. Still that's part of Linux the education. On my current laptop one thing that tripped me up was my bios had a setting called "fastboot" with that enabled (default) I never saw grub and always went straight to the Windows login. So if you don't have a boot menu at power up check your bios settings. FYI if you ever update your bios it will most likely enable fastboot and you have to go in and disable it again.

  • @beedi1
    @beedi1 2 года назад +31

    When using diskpart in Windows there is no need to delete the partitions one by one. You can save time just by using the command “clean” once you’ve selected the correct disk. This will remove all partitioning information from the selected disk.

    • @charlesborlase2238
      @charlesborlase2238 2 года назад +3

      yup, the clean feature is quick, however, always good to list partitions and double check that what you think you are smoking is what you expect to see smoked. Only have to smoke the wrong drive once to be very sad.

    • @krizven7419
      @krizven7419 2 года назад

      Ever had an issue where the screen had bad coloration

  • @scottspa74
    @scottspa74 2 года назад +17

    Another excellent guide. I have an older laptop dual-booting Ubuntu and win 10, but couldn't remember how I achieved it. Your videos go at a perfect pace, I think. Not too fast, and very articulate. Thank you.

  • @ethnicstyledotca
    @ethnicstyledotca 2 года назад +6

    I am really surprised UEFI and TPM 2 didn't even have to be mentioned in this video, I really thought it had more hoops to jump through because Windows forces TPM2.

  • @chinemelumj5349
    @chinemelumj5349 2 года назад +3

    Thank you so much for this video. The instructions were very easy to follow, I did have problem with pressing the f12 button but apparently it‘s possible to boot from a flash drive from the advanced settings in windows 10 and windows 11(in case anyone is having the same problem), this option works as well.

    • @xrafter
      @xrafter 2 года назад

      Some computers have the boot menu mapped to another key.
      Some keys in include F1-4 F7 Eetc

    • @chinedum.
      @chinedum. 2 года назад

      Thank you Chinemelum, your tip was very helpful.😊

  • @edwinschutjes8878
    @edwinschutjes8878 Год назад +2

    Wanted to try Ubuntu for a while, this video is a great entry point to do so! Also gave me a little refresher on Windows in the process, because I have been using MacOS for 20+ years now. Great job!

  • @juanpisocampo
    @juanpisocampo 2 года назад +8

    U have to be aware of the bitlocker of windows, u have to turn it off before the installation of ubuntu, then everything ok

  • @fiddleronthenet3360
    @fiddleronthenet3360 2 месяца назад

    Thanks so much for this guide! It got me through the process for the most part, though I ran into issues with secure boot (had to turn it off then back on with an additional option for Microsoft 3rd party certs), bitlocker (had to turn it off and back on), and setting up drive encryption on Ubuntu (turns out you can only do that during install, and you have to temporarily select "erase disk" to access advanced features, then change the selection to dual boot with Windows).

  • @sambathnarayananparthasara9403
    @sambathnarayananparthasara9403 2 года назад +1

    You made my day. Thank you ! Making my Win 11 with Dual boot with Ubuntu, Nvidia driver, - bang on , This is what I plan to do when I get my new m/c next week. Thanks again

  • @OscarFURIOUS
    @OscarFURIOUS 2 года назад +3

    Anyone on the other side of the coin (having linux and needing to install W10/11:
    1.1) You have just 1 disk. Enter on any linux live usb that has a disk utility (like gparted) and shrink your home partition leaving at least 128gb? free (that depends on you)
    1.2) You have 2 disks. Just ignore 1.1 since it's easier for you.
    2) Boot into W10/11 install and make sure you enter into "Custom Install" and you select the partition (for 1.1) that is blank or the 2nd disk (for 1.2)
    3) After you have installed and configured W10/11, go to BIOS setup and change the boot order to make sure Grub/linux is at the top.
    4) Boot into linux and sudo update-grub
    5) Now you should see the Windows Boot Manager option on Grub so you will have almost the sames as 21:36

  • @michalroesler
    @michalroesler Год назад

    This is the best, most complete youtube tutorial regarding Windows/Linux dual boot.

  • @williamkakooza4603
    @williamkakooza4603 Год назад +1

    I like the matrix pc behind. Thanks a lot

  • @MyReviews_karkan
    @MyReviews_karkan 2 года назад +9

    For the record, Fedora media writer is just fantastic and is available for every OS, too. Just something to add. Thanks for the video, Jay!

    • @Yazan_Majdalawi
      @Yazan_Majdalawi Год назад

      @Chris I was surprised he didn't use it and no one in the comments suggested it!

  • @wotacroc
    @wotacroc 2 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for the help in this video. Easy to follow commentary and full step by step instructions. My only problem was downloading Ubuntu from a USB stick. All was good when I decided to use a CD instead.

  • @patriotic1526
    @patriotic1526 2 года назад +4

    I like your videos. Very easy to follow and understand. I jumped head first into Linux without the dual boot. Probably should have not done that lol. Keep it up man, I appreciate it

  • @aswathnarayanan392
    @aswathnarayanan392 2 месяца назад

    Thanks a lot . Managed to boot version 24.04

  • @matiashoyal4356
    @matiashoyal4356 Год назад +2

    Very nice video but as a warning for viewers, take into consideration the windows BitLocker encrypted enable option before starting installation. Thanks a lot for this video!!

    • @hackyhack
      @hackyhack Год назад +1

      Thanks for the feedback. Do I have to turnoff BitLocker permanently to have dual boot setup? or Disable BitLocker to setup the multiboot and enable BitLocker once done? Would this even work?

    • @wokeclub1844
      @wokeclub1844 Год назад

      Which method did you use to disable the Bitlocker encryption?

  • @OinSonOfGloin
    @OinSonOfGloin Год назад +8

    70 MB/sec lol. You brush that off by saying yeah I got good internet. Thats wild

  • @ACEthetrue
    @ACEthetrue 2 года назад +1

    Incredibly detailed video! Was helpful in installing dual boot 2x as well as removing partitions on another device!!

  • @USAMehdi
    @USAMehdi Год назад

    Thank You very much for explaining every step so clearly. It's great! I just want to remind everyone to make sure and Disable the BitLocker (in Windows11) before installing Ubuntu or else you'll run into trouble. My PC locked up but MS sent me a looongest key code to enter ... so I got out of it all right! BitLocker is an MS antitheft method which is good but won't allow writing to or changing the partition.

  • @bkrich
    @bkrich 2 года назад +6

    A video on customizing grub would be nice for dual-boot, I know they’re some fancy ones that look really nice.

  • @aldenpines
    @aldenpines Год назад

    Thank you so much! Clearest instructional video for this subject ever. Got my new Minisforum UM350 set up for dual booting. Now to learn Linux (shudder!).

  • @xonemasters
    @xonemasters Год назад

    Fantastic Guide! I really like that when necessary you do a deep dive and know when to get to the meat of it. Thanks

  • @astronauticalengineer8589
    @astronauticalengineer8589 2 года назад +1

    the ubuntu boot loader does not show up on my computer at startup, thus I cannot get into the ubuntu os. how can i resolve this problem ?

  • @sivakumaranbazhagan1672
    @sivakumaranbazhagan1672 2 года назад

    thanks much man, been able to install Ubentu on my system with dual boot settings. Good that you pointed out the redflags alongside the install process.

  • @leandersmith6184
    @leandersmith6184 Год назад

    thank you so much for this clear, not geeky at all explination im new in this ubuntu world so you will see me again watching videos from you , thanks for sharing all the way from mexico

  • @fortunefc6650
    @fortunefc6650 2 года назад +1

    Nice video Jay, very easy to understand and follow the procedures.

  • @daniellandero6564
    @daniellandero6564 2 года назад +1

    I have an issue, the grub menu doesn't appear when I restart and it automatically starts Windows 11. How can I solve this?

  • @weseehowcommiegoogleis3770
    @weseehowcommiegoogleis3770 2 года назад

    I don't dual boot a laptop. For Desktop I just run 2 drives with their own systems and select which boots from the quick boot option selector. Saves so much time and headach in the long run.

  • @GeoffSeeley
    @GeoffSeeley 2 года назад +3

    What about Secure boot? Fast boot with CSM disabled for modern UEFI hardware?

  • @Charlie8913
    @Charlie8913 2 года назад +2

    Usually i set it up in a way that i can boot my Windows installation either native or as a VM through virt-manager. I like this much more than dual booting because i usually run Linux and when i have to do something in Windows i just start it as VM. And when i do more serious things in windows i can just dual-boot the same Windows installation.
    Only the virtio-win graphic drivers seem to not work good with windows 11 because it doesn't automatically change resolution to the size of the virt-manager window, that worked with windows 10.

    • @Monarchias
      @Monarchias 2 года назад

      Nice. I dream about the same. How you make windows to be a native boot and also a VM?

    • @Charlie8913
      @Charlie8913 2 года назад

      @@Monarchias In virt-manager add a VM and set the firmware to OVMF with secureboot. Add the harddrive (/dev/sda in my case) and set the cpu to host-passthrough. Add the virtio-win ISO as a CD drive, that's needed for the drivers to access disk and network. For Windows 11 you may also add a virtual TPM and configure it to pass through the real TPM module. I installed windows native and then reinstalled it through the VM, i'm not sure if installing native is needed but installing through the VM was necessary with Windows 11 because otherwise the VM wouldn't find the drive and thus didn't boot.
      On my Windows 10 installation i had to remove software from asus that was automatically installed because i have an asus mainboard and that software lead to a bluescreen when booting it as a VM.

    • @Monarchias
      @Monarchias 2 года назад

      @@Charlie8913 Thank you. I'll definitely will try it. With windows 10 for now, and later who knows. :) I hope Jay will also cover this with troubleshooting included later in a future video. Let's hope the best. Until that I'll do some experiments. Thx again.

  • @boh70326
    @boh70326 2 года назад +1

    How to delete Ubuntu once I got the dueal boot ?I just want to get back at my original Windows 11 full hd

  • @Bockanator
    @Bockanator 2 года назад +1

    Thanks! Found this guide very useful and worked perfectly, you earned a new subscriber!

  • @matthewsjardine
    @matthewsjardine 2 года назад +8

    I have heard that the process for dual booting Ubuntu hasn't changed, because Ubuntu supports Secure Boot and is signed by Microsoft to run just fine with the whole TPM, Secure Boot process in the UEFI. Other distros, however, such as Pop!_OS does not support Secure Boot. I have heard that disabling Secure Boot to get Pop!_OS working will prevent Windows 11 from starting up when you switch back. You would need to go and re-enable Secure Boot each time. One or two folks have even found that Windows 11 will still refuse to boot if you have something like GRUB linked to a distro that doesn't support Secure Boot. You will have serious trouble booting back into Windows.
    If you have any advice in this regard, I would really value your insights. I would love to dual boot alongside Windows 11, but I am risk adverse as I work in a bring your own computer environment, and Windows is an important part of my ability to get work done.

    • @jamescat8411
      @jamescat8411 2 года назад +1

      Chris is right. I dual boot by changing drives. You can either use a removable drive bay or a bank of switches to switch drives. Both can be bought off of Amazon. The switches are advertised to switch drives off to save power, which isn't a good way to save power, but they can be used to select the drive to boot to before booting.

    • @matthewsjardine
      @matthewsjardine 2 года назад

      @@jamescat8411 Thanks for your response. Do you not have issues with the TPM and Secure Boot? Or do you switch it off and back on again as needed? The TPM is not part of the SSD, and stores it’s own keys.

    • @jamescat8411
      @jamescat8411 2 года назад

      @@matthewsjardine I leave secure boot on, and install the Linux version on the new drive. I don't know about TPM, but I think it should be fine, because TPM seems to be a passive way of doing things. That is the OS needs to access the TPM first to have anything happen.

    • @matthewsjardine
      @matthewsjardine 2 года назад

      @@jamescat8411 I am not sure how it worked for you, but I am glad it did 🙂 I guess it is one of those theory vs reality kind of things. I am going to install Pop!_OS and hope for the best. I am technically proficient enough to deal with whatever may come, even if that means reinstalling Windows.
      In theory, that should not work. TPM stores the signed OS files that is allowed to boot. If not signed, the PC is supposed to not allow you to boot into that OS. I know for a fact that Pop!_OS is not signed by Microsoft. Ubuntu, Fedora, Open SUSE is, however. Therefore, they should work fine.

  • @joufu1011
    @joufu1011 2 года назад +2

    Awesome video!!! Super helpful for someone who is wanting to try dual booting. I did have one question. Do you have any resources or tips for completely removing the other OS? I've found a few resources for removing Linux and the partition if you want to go back to just windows, but haven't found anything on the Linux side. Would it be easier to just do a full reinstall, or is there a way to remove and extend partitions in Linux? Thanks in advance.

  • @elektron2kim666
    @elektron2kim666 2 года назад +1

    I love having some dual boot or complicated boot computers. There is a sequence to follow, though. "Legacy boot" and whatnot in BIOS must be decided on before you start. That also mean that you don't have a choice sometimes. You can risk to redo the whole thing with wrong choices.

  • @robbylock1741
    @robbylock1741 Год назад

    The same process works with other Linux distros such as Fedora, Debian etc. Currently I have Windows and Fedora dual booting on an HP Laptop.

    • @just4divergent
      @just4divergent Год назад

      Did you have problems with loading WIndows? Once I disabled secure boot in bios and from that moment, I have problems with booting windows, specially with dual boot windows and Ubuntu. DO you have any solution? HE mention in video, that he recorded but I couldn't find. Thanks.

  • @donbypiso486
    @donbypiso486 2 года назад +1

    Great vid, but pity you didn't show how to use the wholw drive with Ubuntu and windows, in your case so that you have nearly 1tb which you can use by both operating systems.

  • @takakazushi6703
    @takakazushi6703 2 года назад

    Another home run. Thank you Jay. In a future video, could you explain how to set up a 3rd partition on the hard drive that could be used for data you want to make accessible to BOTH operating systems on a dual boot system? Thank you. Bonus points if you show how to SET UP a HDD and/or NextCloud to accept TIMESHIFT back up images. Many thanks.

  • @lse123polis
    @lse123polis Год назад +1

    I have Windows 10 home and 11 home, if installing Ubuntu 22.04 as 3rd OS, and ask create boot loader, which partition to choose?

  • @eflarsen
    @eflarsen Год назад

    doing this tonight, thanks for the easy to follow tutorial!

  • @kartik9892
    @kartik9892 2 года назад

    Please make a video on dualbooting multiple linux distros

  • @finkitsallover
    @finkitsallover 2 года назад +1

    How do you remove it and reallocate partition space back to my windows

  • @toomanyhackerssmokealot1176
    @toomanyhackerssmokealot1176 2 года назад

    awesome, did a reinstall after watching this video as I messed a few steps the 1st time, ha, not annymore. Many thanks, this is a frickin awesome machine now that it was installed properly - the drivers yes!! or not... but now the configuration was of course smooth and without errors and actually solved my problems I was encountering as stated here in the clip. So, I am gonna try to put Archlinux on an external drive so I can switch between ubuntu or archlinux. Btw, I locked that boot order with master keys so no one can change that, might be worth mentioning? Thanks for the video, so spot on!

  • @Vincent45678
    @Vincent45678 Год назад +1

    My partition style is GPT, Shall I put my both Legacy support and Secure boot disable or Legacy enable and secure disable or Legacy disable and Secure enable Sir?

  • @SB-io3mc
    @SB-io3mc 2 года назад +1

    It is very informing video thanks. I have a question and I have read previous comments. Similar concerns exist but not this exact one. I am currently using W10. I made everything W11 ready. TPM, Secure boot all active. But now my PC can not boot from USB to install anything including my WinPE recovery USB's. What to do to make sure it does? Where to copy security keys for successfull and secure boot from USB?

  • @AtomicGeeks
    @AtomicGeeks 2 года назад

    Make sure you right protect USB drive with DiskPart

  • @tpttecmic
    @tpttecmic 2 года назад +1

    Can you do a video adding the windows install as a vm in virt manager so you can access a program or file in Linux without having to reboot?

  • @balakrishnanpaulraj5052
    @balakrishnanpaulraj5052 2 года назад +1

    Thank you , it was very simple to understand and install

  • @ganeshsmm
    @ganeshsmm 2 года назад +2

    Thank you for the nice video. Is it required to disable secure boot, fast boot and hibernation before installing ubuntu along wise windows 11?
    Secondly, does this method automatically create multiple ubuntu partitions --- one for boot, one for root, one for swap, and one for home?

    • @LudoTechWorld
      @LudoTechWorld 2 года назад

      It is required to disable fastboot on laptop or you might won't see grub, I don't lnow for hibernation, but it's not required to disable secure boot since Ubunutu is compatible with it.

  • @aqelessar
    @aqelessar 2 года назад +1

    F12 does not seem to work on my laptop. I tried F2 and setting up still no help. Any suggestions?

  • @robertmaxa6631
    @robertmaxa6631 2 года назад +2

    I'm assuming the procedure is the same for dual booting Windows 10,and Ubuntu, or Ubuntu/Debian derived OS? I've seen some videos,that recommend resizing the partition, n Windows, as opposed to, in Linux. Doesit matter,really?

  • @scapi3382
    @scapi3382 Год назад

    Thank you very much. I had to make a few tweeks since mine is an old laptop, but otherwise really helpful video .

  • @nikolasmanuel6461
    @nikolasmanuel6461 2 года назад

    Great video! Thank you so much couldnt have done it without you!

  • @zeuscarver3112
    @zeuscarver3112 2 года назад +1

    I set up a dual boot system recently (w10 & mint). It was more trouble than its worth. First the clock on the linux partition was off by 4 hours. That wasnt too hard to resolve. But then a weird problem with the networking which took days to figure out what was happening. Only happens when restarting from windows to mint. The nic gets locked and the internet doesnt work. There is no way to unlock the nic in linux. Ive tried many things. Only solution to get the internet working is to power off and power on to load mint. Should be the same thing, restart vs power off then power on. Apparently not. Also the reverse (mint to windows) works fine which made it that much harder to figure out.

  • @sergioleiva5875
    @sergioleiva5875 2 года назад +4

    Great Video. Only one question: Do you have any idea to what to do to prevent losing GRUB with any Windows upgrade?. I have this problem with my machine (Dual boot with Windows 10 and Ubuntu) everytime I download updates or security patchs. I use boot reaload to recovering the GRUB. Thanks a lot.

    • @dhiraj2529
      @dhiraj2529 2 года назад +1

      Yes ..this problem is happend with me too whenever I install Ubuntu dual boot with windows 11 in hard disk (in MBR partition style ) . How to solve the grub rescue problem ?

  • @jrcallen52
    @jrcallen52 2 года назад

    This was very good. I’m going to give it a try. Thank you!

  • @tonyoallie
    @tonyoallie 2 года назад +5

    That's easy. How about a distro like popOS? XD

    • @ozrencupac
      @ozrencupac 2 года назад +2

      Pretty much the same
      The installer is slightly different but it should be the mostly the same

  • @roybran2
    @roybran2 Год назад +1

    @jay Thanks for always delivering high quality and easy to follow tutorials. I've been following your channel for years.
    I ran into the Grub bootloader issue you mentioned.
    My side by side installation went to plan until the reboot point. i.e. I removed the USB media per the Ubuntu installation wizard. But, rather see the Linux bootloader with Unbuntu and windows OS options, my machine went straight to Windows. And I've checked the BIOS boot options and Linux is not an option.
    I did see the option for "EFI File Boot 0: yes" and chose this as the main boot option. But, again Windows boots.
    Any ideas or suggestions?
    Thanks again

    • @AlameenAdeyemi
      @AlameenAdeyemi 8 месяцев назад

      Am also facing the same errors Pls how did u fix it

  • @muppluadhiraj3647
    @muppluadhiraj3647 2 года назад +2

    Sir, is that good to dual boot a laptop most of are saying it would effect the laptop

    • @raghav_ramesh15
      @raghav_ramesh15 2 года назад +2

      it wont affect ur laptop go for it
      unless u have a potato

  • @GeorgeTJ
    @GeorgeTJ 2 года назад +1

    I've got a Matebook D14 (Intel version) and thinking about installing Ubuntu alongside Windows 11. My main concern is that the HD of the laptop came partitioned into 2 partitions - the main (W10 one) which is about 120gb and a second empty one (about 340gb) as data storage.
    I am considering installing Ubuntu straight onto the Data partition but my main problem is where the boot manager is going to be installed? Ideally I want it to install on the Data partition alongside Ubuntu OS itself and not on the primary Windows partition (which is already about 70% full). This is not only going to minimize the chance of messing with Windows filesystem but I I will also be able to format the Data partition with Diskmanager all at once and re-purpose it as data storage if needed.
    So my question is how can I be sure the boot manager will install on the 2nd (data) partition and not on the primary one?

  • @phrtao
    @phrtao 2 года назад +2

    It is always a good idea to keep your original windows install on a new computer because most BIOS up dates only work on windows. But why would anyone want to dual boot Ubuntu with Windows 11 anyway ?

    • @majkati69
      @majkati69 2 года назад

      @Thom Giordano in some cases it's not that you're not ready, it's just impossible to completely switch. I'm ready to ditch windows completely asap but i need premiere for work and Adobe are absolute cunts, just refusing to make a Linux version

    • @esphilee
      @esphilee 2 года назад

      @@majkati69 , I have migrated to Linux, except Solidworks for my day job.
      I use gimp and blender in stead of Adobe. It was a steep learning curve, and don’t expect it to work like Adobe. Since I am doing it as hobby, it doesn’t matter. And there are always work arounds.
      The advantage of open source is of cause money saving. I have 3 computers that I can delicate the job of rendering and editing without having to buy 3 licenses. Also because Linux, gimp and blender is not resource hungry, they work fine in slightly older computers. That put my other computers into good use.

    • @majkati69
      @majkati69 2 года назад +1

      @@esphilee Same here, can't wait for the day I can finally stop dual booting windows. Feels bad having to keep that dookie stain of an operating system on my PC just for two programs.

    • @EdwinFairchild
      @EdwinFairchild 2 года назад

      Because as muc as you'd like to think it, Linux does not have all the tools windows, basic things like drawing and typing software sure,... But advanced engineering tools and some IDEs do not have a Linux equivalent etc...

  • @purpleman173
    @purpleman173 Год назад

    I just finished watching your "Choosing the Right Linux Distribution | Pros & Cons of the Top 7 Server Distros" video on the @Linode #Linode RUclips channel. Kudos man, you're one helluva teacher. I appreciate and value the helpful information. Thanks for sharing.

  • @chessgo5028
    @chessgo5028 Год назад

    11:28 Hello, what do you mean by "inserted the flash drive" are we talking about the reeal phisical flash drive here? Thanks.

  • @moncrieffd
    @moncrieffd 2 года назад

    I had an issue a couple of years back trying to do what one demonstrated. The version of Window 10 was using radio to stream from disk. However, the version of Ubuntu (19.10 I think), which was a free desktop version, was incompatible with this interface. I couldn't load Ubuntu without changing the BIOS settings on the computer (XPS-15). Does Ubuntu 21.10 use radio interface? I can't believe Windows 11 has regressed.
    An excellent video.

  • @ugwulo
    @ugwulo 2 года назад

    Great video man and straight forward too👍
    I would love to dual boot on an external HDD, is this possible and recommended?

  • @wokeclub1844
    @wokeclub1844 Год назад

    For those stuck at not getting F12 to work, try pressing it multiple times during that restart. Then if it works, but the screen looks different than the one in the video, choose the one with the flash drive.

    • @anthropicPanda
      @anthropicPanda Год назад

      Sometimes F8 is the button to hit for some motherboards..mostly Asus

  • @bitsindriashwitkumar5356
    @bitsindriashwitkumar5356 2 года назад +1

    After installing Ubuntu I restarted my pc and it is always opening with windows. Please help

  • @PaxHominibusBonaeVoluntatis
    @PaxHominibusBonaeVoluntatis Год назад

    Hi. Your explanation was really great! That was easy ! I have a dual boot on my laptop.Thank you so much. Cheers! C U!

  • @lescroc1073
    @lescroc1073 Год назад

    This video is a masterpiece !

  • @umbertopappalardi8667
    @umbertopappalardi8667 2 года назад

    Worked like a charm! Thanks a lot!

  • @zorin1us
    @zorin1us 2 года назад +1

    @learnLinuxTV How about create a video on how to create a portable Ubuntu drive. Maybe install Ubuntu on an external USB SATA drive. I bought a M.2 SATA enclosure and put a 256 M.2 SATA drive in it. This way, I can move it around between my different machine. My laptop with integrated AMD graphics and My desktop which is running an nvidia card. It is not easy to create a portable drive because the Ubuntu install always installs onto the first EFI partition. This would a more advanced video.

    • @KnotNuts
      @KnotNuts 2 года назад +1

      Pretty easy once you know how (I had the same question a couple of months ago). You have to use VirtualBox (OS doesn't matter). Create a new machine, without a virtual drive (do NOT start it). Then manually connect the (ubuntu )ISO in storage settings, then connect your external drive in the USB settings. Now you can startup the machine and install (Ubuntu will only see the external drive). Et voila! a portable ubuntu (or any other Linux distro). Bonus tip: Put it on a small thumbdrive, stick it in the PC of the biggest Linux hater you know. Change the boot order in the BIOS. And watch them explode....

  • @codecage9333
    @codecage9333 Год назад

    Did you do a video of how to recover if Windows waxes the GRUB boot menu? You mentioned doing one in this video, at about the 22 minute mark, but I haven't stumbled upon it.

  • @esphilee
    @esphilee 2 года назад +2

    How does dual-boot compare to KVM in this scenario?
    I have been using Linux for most of my works, except Solidworks which only work in Windows.
    Should I consider KVM or dual boot?

    • @samuelitooooo
      @samuelitooooo 2 года назад +1

      Would definitely consider a virtual machine if you just need/want one or two apps on Windows, if only for the fact that you can partition your entire drive for Linux and then easily manage how much space you want for your VM as needed. You can also clone this VM and back it up.

    • @tpttecmic
      @tpttecmic 2 года назад +1

      The one thing with that is solidworks should use gpu acceleration so you will need an extra gpu to pass through to the vm which you could run the host on an integrated gpu and pass the dedicated gpu through to the windows guest.

    • @esphilee
      @esphilee 2 года назад

      @@tpttecmic , that mean I have to find a Laptop that has both integrated GPU and discrete GPU?
      Since all my works are in Linux, I find myself needing to reboot frequently. Unfortunately Windows and Solidworks startup time are longer than desired (pain in the ass actually).
      The main question is: Does KVM cause significant performance lost in Solidworks, compared to dual boot.

  • @saad5891
    @saad5891 2 года назад

    I have issues with mint and win10, if you could do a video about troubleshooting boot problems.

  • @gandimurali7021
    @gandimurali7021 Год назад

    Thank you

  • @mathesonstep
    @mathesonstep 2 года назад

    Diskpart clean is a fast way to clean the flash drive

  • @SamSam-ic7qm
    @SamSam-ic7qm 2 года назад

    If i'm not mistaken you could use clean command after selecting the correct disk, instead of deleting each partition manually ?

  • @pepounlazar
    @pepounlazar 2 года назад

    Thank you! Works like a charm

  • @paulmcgreen
    @paulmcgreen 2 года назад

    I was trying to set up dual boot with full disk encryption. Spent two days playing with partitioning and distros, but it didn't work. Moreover I have optane nvme. So I wanna have RAID to manage it. Insane that in 2022 that's so difficult!

  • @bsszzt
    @bsszzt 2 года назад

    in diskpart I always used to do:
    >>list disk
    >>select disk X
    >>clean
    >>create part prim
    [/ >>create partition primary]
    that seems a lot quicker to me and it should also erase all information on the device (including all partitions) + then create a new primary partition so windows is able to use the device again.
    Is there any difference to your method that I should be aware of?

  • @ayushakarsh6546
    @ayushakarsh6546 2 года назад

    @learnLinuxTV please add a video for fixing a windows bios update that deletes ubuntu from boot menu, using f12 , system-d or GRUB anyone. It once happened to me with Pop os

  • @blackcrow1675
    @blackcrow1675 2 года назад +1

    pls make a vedio on windows removes Ubuntu bootloader ..

  • @EdwinFairchild
    @EdwinFairchild 2 года назад

    Do you have a video on dual booting from a separate hard drive. I remembsr trying this on my desktop and I could not figure out how to do it. Dual boot tend to be on a single hard drive a lot of times. Right now I dual boot on my laptop but I would much rather has Linux on my desktop on its own hard drive

    • @jamescat8411
      @jamescat8411 2 года назад

      Put your boot drive you are using in a removable drive bay.

  • @kitetastic
    @kitetastic Год назад

    healthy partition showing in disk manager but still not in usb imager , any ideas?

  • @JohnSmith-ft4gc
    @JohnSmith-ft4gc Год назад

    Looks like USBImager 1.0.9 will partition & write in one step. You don't need Disk Manager

  • @CLLL123
    @CLLL123 24 дня назад

    Hi any fix in the no wifi adapter found

  • @connorplank2989
    @connorplank2989 2 года назад

    Hi, I love the video... but when I get to the Installation Type Step- I don't see the "Install Ubuntu alongside Windows Boot Manager."

  • @horrorspidey7033
    @horrorspidey7033 2 года назад

    waiting for this. Thank you

  • @hellogandara
    @hellogandara 2 года назад

    Thanks for your tutorial but tell me why you dont use Rufus instead of usbimager?

  • @AndreAndraos
    @AndreAndraos 2 года назад

    Nicely done, thanks

  • @CharlesFockaert
    @CharlesFockaert Год назад

    thanks much for this informative tutorial.
    so good so far.
    Did you download Ubuntu to an external drive
    or to the computer's hard drive?
    Thanks
    edit1: answer - laptop hard drive
    edit2: I don't see the USB imager download link in the description?
    I found it online. 1.0.9
    edit3:
    got to the write to the flash drive step
    and the USBimager didn't recognize any disk to install the image on? replayed the video many times.
    edit4:Windows graciously "protected me" from runnng this app, and I see no way around this "protection."
    I have New Volume (D) showing but no way to write to it.
    This is a big reason I want to dump Windows 11.
    Why can't I over ride Windows? I'm running as Admin.

  • @akhilbisht798
    @akhilbisht798 Год назад

    I am not getting option of installing windows along side Ubuntu what should I do?

  • @mp3frog
    @mp3frog 2 года назад

    thanks, this was so helpful!

  • @rahulrohilla1742
    @rahulrohilla1742 2 года назад

    Dear Sir,
    I have dual booted my HP pavilion Cs2082 as you said. But I am unable to see the boot loader. I am unable to start ubuntu from the boot BIOS menu also. Kindly help.
    Thanks

  • @adrianfromhell
    @adrianfromhell 2 года назад

    Thanks a lot! That's what I needed

  • @rezamochamaddiannagara9756
    @rezamochamaddiannagara9756 Год назад

    I have a brand new lenovo laptop, it has windows 11 home preinstalled. I'm going to install linux for dual boot, I found that on windows drive C, the bitlocker was enabled. I can't disable secure boot because it will ask bitlocker key. To get the usb booted, should I disable bitlocker first and the disable secure boot?

  • @esroskesafos3533
    @esroskesafos3533 Год назад

    Hi. Thank you so much for the video. I have a question. I unfortunately added openmpi in my mint ulyana and I could not remove it completely. I also have mpich and therefore my executables give errors and I could not my some scientific programs. How can I completely delete that openmpi without doing harm on anything else? Thanks in advance

  • @kg4135
    @kg4135 Год назад

    What's the ram usage for Mint vs Ubuntu? Does Ubuntu take up more ram?

  • @Bwajster
    @Bwajster Год назад

    After the dual boot I'm able to run Ubuntu without any error, but, Windows OS is resulting in an error(automatic repair error).
    Not sure what I did wrong. How do I fix this ?