Wow! I feel like I am drinking from a fire hydrant. I have been using Linux since 2004, but as a user. I am not skilled in it. I have set up 10-12 laptops and 3-4 desktop with various flavors over the years for family members. Several I have set up as dual boot with some version of Windows. My latest have been some Dell Latitude Windows 7 laptops and I have never had a problem until now. My latest is a E6430 with UEFI. It is set up in UEFI Boot Mode with Secure boot turned off. I would like to keep the Windows 7 install it came with on a 50 GB partition and then install Kubuntu 14.04.2 LTS for the regular use OS. I want 12 GB for a / partition, 6 GB for a /home partition (I link almost everything -- wine, virtualbos, documents, etc -- to the data partition), 8 GB for swap and the rest for a data partition. I plan on running Windows 7 in VirtualBox for the few regular applications that won't run well in Wine. I have gotten the original Windows 7 partition shrunk and the other partitions designated using Windows disk management. All seems to be well on the Windows side on reboot. I have tried to follow Steve Riley's “Dual-booting Kubuntu on a Windows machine” thread part 3, but did have some problems, perhaps because it did not apply to Win 7. When I boot to a live USB my problems start.
PROBLEMS:
1. Formatting for my new partitions is grayed out in partition manager (this is also why I had to do the shrinking and partitioning in Windows). Will the installer be able to partition them? Why can I not format them?
2. When I am ready to install I get a warning:
The partition table format in use on your disks normally requires you to create a separate partition for boot loader code. This partition should be marked for use as a "Reserved BIOS boot area" and should be at least 1 MB in size. Note that this is not the same as a partition mounted on /boot.
If you do not go back to the partitioning menu and correct this error, boot loader installation may fail later, although it may still be possible to install the boot loader to a partition.
I read in several threads that grub should not be used. But what do I do? The more I read this UEFI thing is very confusing to me.
3. Steve Riley mentioned in a post or two that he did not like installing from the installer in a liveUSB session (or if that is not what he said I apologize). What are the options?
I really want to save the original Windows install.
PROBLEMS:
1. Formatting for my new partitions is grayed out in partition manager (this is also why I had to do the shrinking and partitioning in Windows). Will the installer be able to partition them? Why can I not format them?
2. When I am ready to install I get a warning:
The partition table format in use on your disks normally requires you to create a separate partition for boot loader code. This partition should be marked for use as a "Reserved BIOS boot area" and should be at least 1 MB in size. Note that this is not the same as a partition mounted on /boot.
If you do not go back to the partitioning menu and correct this error, boot loader installation may fail later, although it may still be possible to install the boot loader to a partition.
I read in several threads that grub should not be used. But what do I do? The more I read this UEFI thing is very confusing to me.
3. Steve Riley mentioned in a post or two that he did not like installing from the installer in a liveUSB session (or if that is not what he said I apologize). What are the options?
I really want to save the original Windows install.
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