Question:
dualbooting linux in windows?
alexdra9015
2007-06-07 19:53:27 UTC
k so what i want is to run windows...and inside of windows, i want to be able to run linux (the linux i want to run is SuSE). i have SuSE on another Harddrive and installed and ready and everything...the only way to use it is to switch the power cord and serial cord( i think thats the name) from the back of my windows Harddrive to the back of my Linux harddrive...i want to be able to use both at the same time...perferably running linux in windows...but its that not possible, then windows in linux, i dont care which one really, ......is that possibly? if so what programs can make this happen (price is not a problem if i have to buy it)? please help me
Six answers:
Y4M4T0_Guy
2007-06-08 15:05:26 UTC
This is the one I use.

I do not use a program. When your computer first turns on, there is a thing called "BOOT MENU" or something that says "Boot." If you go there, they give you a list of drives (Hard drives, optical drives, USB drives, etc). You select the drive with LInux, and you boot with it. Some Linux come with GRUB or some other boot loader, so after you choose the drive, you can still choose to boot with windows, because it gives you a list of the operating systems on your computer. Ubuntu has GRUB, but i dont know about SuSe. If it has GRUB or any bootloader, make the drive with SuSe the default drive by going to the Setup menu during BIOS, which is the first thing that pops up when you turn the computer on. Go to the BOOT tab, and make the drive with LInux the default. I hope this answers your questions.



happy computing!
?
2016-11-27 05:56:23 UTC
ok the persons you're chatting with are retarded.... The BIOS is the ordinary enter/output device, its the subject that facilitates your hardware to talk with the utility. So asserting linux doesnt use the bios is basically thoroughly retarded... And updating the bios could in no way impact flash or java, returned I have no theory the place the fk your friends get their information from... Im unsure what went incorrect for the period of your bios replace, yet in many cases if some thing is going incorrect, you turn your computing device right into a brick. W/o the bios you would be no longer able to place in an OS, as none of your hardware could artwork, so which you couldnt boot from a cd or flash force or something to place in an OS onto your computing device.... the only thank you to restoration this concern could the two to get a clean bios chip or a clean motherboard. And are you confident there became right into a concern along with your bios replace? once you turn on your computing device it wouldnt even post w/o a bios, which capacity no longer something could ensue. in case you turn it on and are seeing your producer splash demonstrate, then your bios is high quality, and it may desire to in all probability be your homestead windows boot is corrupted. If that could desire to be the case, insert your homestead windows cd (make sure you place it besides from cd as priority on your bios). Then it is going to say press any key to proceed. From there click installation then click restoration. Then decide on startup restoration. After its executed eliminate the disc and notice if homestead windows will boot. quite its complicated that can assist you once you provide little to no information proper to the subject.
anonymous
2007-06-07 20:03:04 UTC
As per your explaination, you have two hard drives one has windows and another has linux on it but because of some reason you have to connect the data cord and the power cord each time you want to use a hard disk. That is strange. Generally you have two Data cables each having two connectors, that allows you to connect 4 devices max.

So even if you have two cd/dvd drives, you can still connect two hard disk permenantly inside the computer



In case you haven't installed them in a dual boot then you can do so again.



All that you need to do is to boot from the linux installation disk and create a dual boot installation either on the same HD (having windows on it) or on the other HD (having linux on it)



A dual boot installation should ease things a bit
Linux Root Error
2007-06-07 19:58:55 UTC
You can run VMWare or Microsoft's Virtual PC in Windows. Install the software, create a virtual harddrive and pop in your linux cd, point the virutal pc to boot from the cd and install. In linux, you can use a program called qemu. It pretty much does the same as VMware or Virtual PC.
themeatloaf
2007-06-07 20:03:00 UTC
Partition Magic allows you to create, resize and merge partitions on your hard drive without destroying data. Partition Magic helps organize and protect your data, run multiple operating systems, convert file system types and fix partition table errors.



Features:



· Organize and protect the information on a hard drive

· Easy, step-by-step wizards help with performing partitioning tasks

· Preview the effects of partitioning a hard drive before implementing anything

· Safely manage multiple operating systems

· Partition hard drives as large as 80 GB

· Access and partition external USB drives

· Undelete a deleted partition from rescue disks

· Remotely copy, move, delete, and create partitions across a TCP/IP connection

· Create and run scripts to automate common partitioning tasks

· Shred partitions to ensure the security of corporate data on retiring hard disks

· Convert from one file system or partition type to another without losing data

· Supports FAT, FAT32, NTFS, and Linux ext2/Swap file systems

· Support for Windows XP



Notice: This is only small and unfunctional demo version. The full version can be buyed here for $69.95.
Deepak
2007-06-07 20:04:16 UTC
see Dual booting options help at Suse Linux


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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