I finally installed Kubuntu and I must say, I am glad I did...so many options I can change...I'm having some fun!
I only have 1 semi serious whine: I have since 2010 had a dual boot system: Win10 on one partition (for games) and a Linux partition (some type of Linux for everything else).
The way I have always done it is using Gparted (the stand alone Partition Manager), I make 2 partitions, one NTFS for win10 and one ext4 for Linux. Then I start the installs, usually Win10 first, and then Linux. I've done this at least 20 times with other Linux, and never had any problems (This time I also tried linux first, same results).
I'm having a very hard time setting up dual boot with Kubuntu. For some reason Kub doesn't want to play with Win10. It wants the entire disk, and the only way I can see to change it is to use the partition manager included in the installer, which I always mess up. Which means: Start Over.
It's frustrating if I want to play agame, as the only way I can do it right now, is to remove the Kub drive from the PC and plug in the win10 drive, which you can imagine gets old real fast.
I have tried installing win10 first and Kub first, but either way Kub refuses to share. I have never had this problem and honestly don't know how to fix it, so I thought I would ask here first, before I shoot the computer.
Many thanks for any ideas or suggestions.
I only have 1 semi serious whine: I have since 2010 had a dual boot system: Win10 on one partition (for games) and a Linux partition (some type of Linux for everything else).
The way I have always done it is using Gparted (the stand alone Partition Manager), I make 2 partitions, one NTFS for win10 and one ext4 for Linux. Then I start the installs, usually Win10 first, and then Linux. I've done this at least 20 times with other Linux, and never had any problems (This time I also tried linux first, same results).
I'm having a very hard time setting up dual boot with Kubuntu. For some reason Kub doesn't want to play with Win10. It wants the entire disk, and the only way I can see to change it is to use the partition manager included in the installer, which I always mess up. Which means: Start Over.
It's frustrating if I want to play agame, as the only way I can do it right now, is to remove the Kub drive from the PC and plug in the win10 drive, which you can imagine gets old real fast.
I have tried installing win10 first and Kub first, but either way Kub refuses to share. I have never had this problem and honestly don't know how to fix it, so I thought I would ask here first, before I shoot the computer.
Many thanks for any ideas or suggestions.
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