Hi All,
I'll start with my PC Specs
1 x DVD Samsung Superwrite Master Optical Drive
2 x 500GB SATA Hard Drives
Motherboard - ASRock G31M-S
CPU - Intel Core2 Duo 3GHz
RAM - 4GB DDR2 800 (3GB Usable)
GPU - NVidia GeForce 9600 GT
Sound Card - Creative XFi Titanium
Monitor - (Actually a TV) Onn LCD 32ANGEL-A 32" TV
Primary OS - Windows 7 Home Premium x64
Dual Booted - Kubuntu 13.10 x64
Saying Dual Booted, that's not entirely accurate. I've tried to Dual Boot Kubuntu 13.10 x64 with Windows 7 but everytime I complete the installation, restart, which automatically spits out the Kubuntu DVD, when it boots back up again, I get the error message:
error: no such device: cbfde183-59a1-42cf-b30c-0b6399642bf4.
grub rescue>
Before Dual Booting, I shrunk my Windows Partition using Windows Partition Manager.
I then followed these instructions for creating the partitions within the free space I created using Windows Partition Manager
askubuntu dot com / questions / 182794 / how-do-i-partition-my-hard-drive-to-install-kubuntu
I would've posted the link properly, but as this is my first post, the forum won't let me.
The only information I properly read from this site is:
To sum up, the / partition should be about 16 GB, swap is a few GB, /home is the rest. So if you have 50 GB of space in total, the /home partition will be about 30 GB. If you have more space, go on and make the / partition larger as mentioned before. swap can be made larger too, maybe twice the amount of RAM.
If you have less than 50 GB of space, it may be better to not have a separate /home partition. In that case make one large / partition and then a swap partition of a few GB. swap is actually optional too, but it's quite important...
The Format? checkbox should be on the / and /home partitions if everything went correctly.
Device for boot loader installation should be "/dev/sda" (no numbers in the end!).
No changes have been made until this point, but when you click Install Now, there is no going back. So check that everything is alright and make sure that the computer is connected to a power source. It is also nice to have an Internet connection (through an Ethernet wire).
Select your country and time zone and click Continue. You probably don't need to change the keyboard layout. Click Continue. Your name is a display name. The username is made out of it. The password is quite important: you will be required to enter it to do administrative actions (e.g. sudo command). You may want to choose automatic login. I wouldn't recommend to encrypt the home folder; I've never used it and I'm not sure if it's reliable.
Enjoy the slide show, wait until the installation ends and reboot the computer.
To recap, after following these instructions and restarting my PC, I get the following error message:
error: no such device: cbfde183-59a1-42cf-b30c-0b6399642bf4.
grub rescue>
Note: To select which OS I want to boot to, I press F11 at the first screen after turning on my PC
I've had this method fully working no problem using Ubuntu 12.04 x64
The only difference being, I chose the option to automatically install Ubuntu alongside Windows.
Kubuntu 13.10 x64 doesn't have this option, which is why I tried to set up my partitions manually.
Sorry if this post is too long.
Thanks,
Adam
I'll start with my PC Specs
1 x DVD Samsung Superwrite Master Optical Drive
2 x 500GB SATA Hard Drives
Motherboard - ASRock G31M-S
CPU - Intel Core2 Duo 3GHz
RAM - 4GB DDR2 800 (3GB Usable)
GPU - NVidia GeForce 9600 GT
Sound Card - Creative XFi Titanium
Monitor - (Actually a TV) Onn LCD 32ANGEL-A 32" TV
Primary OS - Windows 7 Home Premium x64
Dual Booted - Kubuntu 13.10 x64
Saying Dual Booted, that's not entirely accurate. I've tried to Dual Boot Kubuntu 13.10 x64 with Windows 7 but everytime I complete the installation, restart, which automatically spits out the Kubuntu DVD, when it boots back up again, I get the error message:
error: no such device: cbfde183-59a1-42cf-b30c-0b6399642bf4.
grub rescue>
Before Dual Booting, I shrunk my Windows Partition using Windows Partition Manager.
I then followed these instructions for creating the partitions within the free space I created using Windows Partition Manager
askubuntu dot com / questions / 182794 / how-do-i-partition-my-hard-drive-to-install-kubuntu
I would've posted the link properly, but as this is my first post, the forum won't let me.
The only information I properly read from this site is:
- The root partition: here all the system files and applications installed with package manager will be stored.
Click on free space to go to the Create Partition window. The absolute minimum for this partition would be 8000 MB, but that can be not enough. On the system I'm using right now I've installed tons and tons of different packages and I've used about 13 GB, so I recommend to make this partition 16000 MB or even 24000 MB. Also keep in mind this partition shouldn't be too large (i.e. more than 35% of the space), because the rest of the space will be used for your documents and application settings. The type for the partition should preferably be "Primary", but that's not a big deal. Leave the Location... as "Beginning". Use as: "Ext4 journaling file system". Mount Point: "/". - The swap partition: this partition is used as additional RAM if there's not enough of it and also to store the state of RAM for hibernation.
Click on free space. This partition's size should be the same as the amount of RAM on the computer, 2000 MB or something like that. Type... can be Logical. Location...: "Beginning". Use as: "swap area". - The home partition is used to store all your data.
Click on free space. You want this partition to take up all the remaining space, so don't change thepartition size. Type... can be "Logical". Location: "Beginning". Use as: "Ext4...". Mount point: "/home"
To sum up, the / partition should be about 16 GB, swap is a few GB, /home is the rest. So if you have 50 GB of space in total, the /home partition will be about 30 GB. If you have more space, go on and make the / partition larger as mentioned before. swap can be made larger too, maybe twice the amount of RAM.
If you have less than 50 GB of space, it may be better to not have a separate /home partition. In that case make one large / partition and then a swap partition of a few GB. swap is actually optional too, but it's quite important...
The Format? checkbox should be on the / and /home partitions if everything went correctly.
Device for boot loader installation should be "/dev/sda" (no numbers in the end!).
No changes have been made until this point, but when you click Install Now, there is no going back. So check that everything is alright and make sure that the computer is connected to a power source. It is also nice to have an Internet connection (through an Ethernet wire).
Select your country and time zone and click Continue. You probably don't need to change the keyboard layout. Click Continue. Your name is a display name. The username is made out of it. The password is quite important: you will be required to enter it to do administrative actions (e.g. sudo command). You may want to choose automatic login. I wouldn't recommend to encrypt the home folder; I've never used it and I'm not sure if it's reliable.
Enjoy the slide show, wait until the installation ends and reboot the computer.
To recap, after following these instructions and restarting my PC, I get the following error message:
error: no such device: cbfde183-59a1-42cf-b30c-0b6399642bf4.
grub rescue>
Note: To select which OS I want to boot to, I press F11 at the first screen after turning on my PC
I've had this method fully working no problem using Ubuntu 12.04 x64
The only difference being, I chose the option to automatically install Ubuntu alongside Windows.
Kubuntu 13.10 x64 doesn't have this option, which is why I tried to set up my partitions manually.
Sorry if this post is too long.
Thanks,
Adam
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