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Hey. DreamLinux isn't that bad. Detected everything perfectly at boot. Was able to mount the NTFS file system. Ran very smoothly. I still prefer Kubuntu, but this one I can see using to try to "migrate" others to Linux .
1) As has been said, last installed gets the boot-loader, so make it one that will detect and make entries for the others.
2) Consider LVM. If you use it, each Linux will need it's own /boot partition of about 256 MB, so leave enough space, preferably at the 'bottom' of the disk (though it won't make masses of difference) Do NOT attempt to use root on LVM, it's terribly brittle.
3) Create a separate partition for your data, and either mount it as /home/user/data, or somewhere else and put symlinks in your home directories. If you go the LVM route, consider putting this as a physical partition rather than part of the LVM, so if any OS hoses the LVM you don't lose your data.
4) If you want Windows, install it FIRST.
5) I do not multi-boot, so take no notice of me.
I am running Ubuntu 8.10 (yes Gnome) with upgrades applied daily about 0900 UK time. Hardware is Dell Precision 420, 2x 800 MHz PIII, 512 MB RDRAM, nVidia GeForce 6800 128 MB AGP graphics, 18GB SCSI and 500GB IDE HDDs, DVD burner, Hauppage TV card.
One OS is normal, 2 common, 3 or more still nothing special. What would be great is ZERO Operating Systems. All 90% of people really need is a web browser, so just make one that runs on bare metal.
I am running Ubuntu 8.10 (yes Gnome) with upgrades applied daily about 0900 UK time. Hardware is Dell Precision 420, 2x 800 MHz PIII, 512 MB RDRAM, nVidia GeForce 6800 128 MB AGP graphics, 18GB SCSI and 500GB IDE HDDs, DVD burner, Hauppage TV card.
Might be possible, depending on your definition of OS.
Several laptops nowadays are including a little screen in their housing which provides access to a few apps without booting the machine.
I'm not familiar with the specifics, though...
I think gOS (the os used by wal-marts new gpc) is pretty much there. Basically it just uses the various google services for all the apps (has offline ones as well, but they are more backups). Not far from that to a fully online browser. Admittedly it is still a full OS as well (It's Ubuntu based with the enlightenment window manager).
You could also always install a linux distro that asks during the install about whether or not you want each component and just dump all the essential ones bar the browser.
Plus, OLPC & Asus EEE are pretty much bare metal. As is the iphone (albeit coming from a different direction). And DSL and Puppy linux will basically run on anything.
Another interesting option I came across today http://www.zonbu.com/home/index.htm
basically you buy a $100 pc (or $280 laptop) and sign up for a $15/month plan. You get a green (low power consumtion) computer, plus they auto backup all your stuff to a server somewhere, and you can even access the backup files from a web browser.
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