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timsamoff's Avatar
Posts: 1,605 | Thanked: 1,601 times | Joined on Mar 2007 @ Southern California
#1
Since I've never seen it posted here, I thought I'd mention it... Likewise, every time someone asks about installing Linux, people suggest burning an Ubuntu Live CD...

If you want a "dual-boot" of your Windows OS and Ubuntu Linux on your machine without ever having to reformat/partition your hard drive, just install:

Wubi

Wubi installs just like any other Windows app (with an easy-to-follow Wizard). It takes a user-allocated amount of space on your drive and uses it as a psuedo-partition. It also creates a boot option so that when you start your computer, you can choose Windows or Linux.

The best part is that it doesn't actually do anything to your hard drive. If you screw it up, you can just uninstall it via the Windows Add/Remove Programs Control Panel and then reinstall.

And, Wubi is a fully-functioning version of Ubuntu Linux too -- all Repositories work, etc.

So, forget the Live CD. Just install Wubi!

Tim
 

The Following 4 Users Say Thank You to timsamoff For This Useful Post:
EIPI's Avatar
Posts: 794 | Thanked: 784 times | Joined on Sep 2007 @ /Canada/Ontario/GTA
#2
Cool. I'll have to try that out.
 
akd's Avatar
Posts: 304 | Thanked: 32 times | Joined on Nov 2007 @ somewhere in the far south
#3
I am downloading it right now; I´ve heard from it before, but heard too that has some problems once installed ...is it stable?
 
amigokin's Avatar
Posts: 230 | Thanked: 35 times | Joined on Mar 2007
#4
Originally Posted by timsamoff View Post
It also creates a boot option so that when you start your computer, you can choose Windows or Linux.
Tim
If its create a boot option you can screw things up.
 
sondjata's Avatar
Posts: 1,076 | Thanked: 176 times | Joined on Mar 2007
#5
Ummm. No iApps no move. In any event, I can use Qemu and run Linux, windows or whatever right there on my Mac and have been for well over a year now.
 
barry99705's Avatar
Posts: 641 | Thanked: 27 times | Joined on Apr 2007
#6
Originally Posted by sondjata View Post
Ummm. No iApps no move. In any event, I can use Qemu and run Linux, windows or whatever right there on my Mac and have been for well over a year now.
I just use vmware on the mac and run whatever os I want.
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Posts: 334 | Thanked: 55 times | Joined on Aug 2007 @ Eastern Ontario, Canada
#7
How does the perfomance of Ubuntu under wubi compare to Ubuntu under VMware?

I am guessing that it will be faster?
 
Hedgecore's Avatar
Posts: 1,361 | Thanked: 115 times | Joined on Oct 2005 @ Toronto, Ontario, Canada
#8
Cool getting people to try it, but I don't agree. I've been running Ubuntu for 11 months now and the only way I managed to do it was by killing Windows off entirely. I've done the dual boot thing before and I always found myself booting into Windows for something or rather until finally I wasn't booting Linux at all.

The biggest block is changing your mindset. It's like trying to quit smoking if you really don't want to quit. Take Photoshop for example. The Gimp is a fine alternative for most people(<-look! A qualifying statement!), but it's not Photoshop. I had to get my head around that before I became comfortable with the Gimp and dealt with the frustrations of some things not being where I thought they should be.

Still, I'd hope people can wipe the Linux fan boy forces aside and actually give it a shot. I've been happy as hell since I dumped Windows. MAC users would be a harder sell since they're already running a Unix based OS.
 
khalid's Avatar
Posts: 69 | Thanked: 12 times | Joined on Apr 2007 @ Colorado, USA
#9
Originally Posted by Hedgecore View Post
The biggest block is changing your mindset. It's like trying to quit smoking if you really don't want to quit. Take Photoshop for example. The Gimp is a fine alternative for most people(<-look! A qualifying statement!), but it's not Photoshop. I had to get my head around that before I became comfortable with the Gimp and dealt with the frustrations of some things not being where I thought they should be.
I absolutely agree with this. A good number of people that claim Linux is not as good as Windows are really saying it does not work like Windows. So the first thing to recognize is Linux is not Windows and no , it will not run Windows applications. There are equivalent apps on Linux and this page does a decent job of listing those equivalent apps. The best part is almost all of the equivalent apps cost $0 and you do not even have to try to keep bunch of license keys around just so you will be able to reinstall your app in future if you ever need to.
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Posts: 227 | Thanked: 51 times | Joined on Feb 2006
#10
Linux is cool. Linux is awesome. Linux is powerful. Linux can do more than any OS out there.

That said my primary work machine is staying a Macbook pro. It requires less work to keep it working smoothly and the integration of all the pieces of the OS into the core utilities is very valuable. Plus the nice hardware features like the light sensors just work. Linux could do everything my Mac does but it would require a lot of work to get it to that point.

If some smart geek pioneer wants to go through all the headaches and create a "perfect" distro for my macbook where everything "just works" then I might just wipe Leopard and give it a try. But every time I google on converting my system I get lots of pages of frustrated geeks that have to manually tweak things or live with annoyances.

Next laptop I'll probably buy a prebuilt linux system.

David
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