Q. I want to run both Windows XP and Linux, but I don't want to lose any of my files or data...Is there any way to do this, or any recommended Linux distributions?
A. http://wubi-installer.org/
this is a program that is called Wubi and it installs Ubuntu Linux as if it is an application so when you start up your computer you can choose between Ubuntu or Windows
(and none of your data will be lost)
this is a program that is called Wubi and it installs Ubuntu Linux as if it is an application so when you start up your computer you can choose between Ubuntu or Windows
(and none of your data will be lost)
How to get WindowsXP to see a shared linux folder?
Q. Recently installed Debian and completely new to linux. Installed Samba package and selected the shared folder. On my windows machine, I can see the linux box but not a folder or drive under it. The folder is shared under linux with SMB (also tried NFS). The Windows machine has TCP/IP, IPX/SPX and Netbios protocols. When I bring up the add network place window, I can see the box but no folder/drive. When I right click to add it, I get a login window but no login I type in works. Tried the root and user I set up with installation.
Need help with this but also could someone recommend a complete noob guide to linux? All the sites I've read are not easy for complete beginers.
Need help with this but also could someone recommend a complete noob guide to linux? All the sites I've read are not easy for complete beginers.
A. To share a folder between Windows and Linux, it should be formatted as FAT.
How can I tell if my Linux install is in its own partition?
Q. I have a Gateway netbook with Windows 7 starter. I installed the Ubuntu 10 version of Linux. But I don't think it installed on it's its own partition, because it never asked me about the size or anything of a partition or which partition to use. So, I followed some instructions on the internet to put Linux on its own partition, but how do I know its really on there?
A. It did, but if it will make you feel better, do this:
Boot into Linux.
Open a console shell
Type 'df -h'
The partitions will be displayed. The information on the right will tell you the mount point. The one marked '/host' will be the windows partition. On the left the host partition will be /dev/sda1. All the rest are you Linux partitions.
If you want to know more about /dev/sda1, type 'fdisk -l' (be careful with fdisk).
Boot into Linux.
Open a console shell
Type 'df -h'
The partitions will be displayed. The information on the right will tell you the mount point. The one marked '/host' will be the windows partition. On the left the host partition will be /dev/sda1. All the rest are you Linux partitions.
If you want to know more about /dev/sda1, type 'fdisk -l' (be careful with fdisk).
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