Dual-boot Kubuntu and XP with RnR

Hi
I'm trying to dual-boot windows XP and kubuntu 9.10 and I think it makes sense to separate the so called boot and system partition in windows' term (i.e. having \Windows on one partition and the boot.ini, ntldr stuff on another)... But I can't figure out how to separate them...
Since I'm dual-boot I am aware XP should be installed first...what I did was installed it onto the second partition while at the partition screen in the XP install and left a smaller NTFS partition as the first one on the list.  Not sure if that would cause the boot and the system to separate...(it seem so since the boot-related file is on C:\  while the Windows directory is on D:\)
However I install RnR on this Windows and tried to boot into the RnR workspace through the Think button but it notes NTLDR is missing...Windows still boot normally on startup (to me the workspace was probably not installed to the right place perhaps? ; shouldn't it be in like a new service partition called S:\ or something? maybe it got installed into C:\)   I read somewhere that RnR workspace has it's own bootloader and write into the MBR or something...
since I'll also be installing kubuntu the bootloader will surely get messed up again by Grub...so that might completely screw up everything on Windows side...
I have no idea what to do to make kubuntu, windows, and RnR all compatible with each other...
I'm not very familiar with booting and disk management but any help would be appreciated... 

sry i did not meant to emphasize on installation of kubuntu...my thread got moved here becuase the mod thought I was talking about how to install kubuntu....
i really don't want to complicate thing by installing kubuntu inside windows... because my windows frequently die on me...i prefer them to be separate and interact only at the boot level in a separate "boot partition (windows' term: system partition)
this is really about RnR and Windows...the kubuntu install was only a byproduct that I thought might mess thing up even more since it replace the boot loader upon install
so first thing first:   my RnR cannot boot into its own service partition (think button f11); say something about ntldr is missing, however XP still boot fine....it seem like when I install XP it split the boot and the other file into two partition because I chose the second partition on the list during the install, and the boot files got put into the first partition (C:\)  and when I install RnR it seem to used C:\ as the service partition (i assume that the service partition is related to RnR?).  But since file such is ntldr in C:\ is XP'sm I guess it didn't get overwritten by RnR?
Basically the main issue at the moment is I can't get the service partition to work with Windows...i guess kubuntu can come later...

Similar Messages

  • Dual booting S540 and linux with Secure Boot?

    At some point I intend to install archlinux with dual boot on my Thinkpad S540 which currently runs Windows 8.1.
    All the current advice about dual boot on UEFI machines seems to indicate that the way to go is to disable Secure Boot (and Fastboot) for Windows, and then do the linux install choosing a linux bootloader to allow booting either O/S. I believe I know the steps needed to do that.
    Does anyone have any experience with dual booting Windows 8.1 and ArchLinux on the S540?  I would like to retain Secure Boot for Windows, and in the ideal world have Secure Boot running for ArchLinux also. However Secure Boot is fraught with problems for Linux. There are a few distributions such as Ubuntu which will in principle support Secure Boot but I only use ArchLinux and want to install that particular flavour of linux on my machine. It is of course possible to keep switching Secure Boot on and off in the BIOS before booting either of the two installed operating systems but it would be neater and cleaner to have it all with Secure Boot on, or all with it off.
    This is all very new stuff so there may well be a lot of problems, but it is worth exploring. I use rEFInd as my bootloader on another UEFI desktop computer to boot ArchLinux so I am familiar with that bootloader, but dual boot is another thing, and Secure Boot with the fast moving developments in that area is something that until now very few people have tinkered with.
    Any replies and guidance/suggestions appreciated.

    I'm guessing /boot can run from ntfs, however probably not as efficiently as if it were running on ext3/4. Mine runs on Ext4.
    To add confusion, you only create one Extended partition, all partitions you create within the Extended partition are called Logical partitions. You should be able to create enough Logical partitions for your needs.
    Primary/Extended partitions are normally sda1-4 and Logical partitions will usually start from sda5 on modern Sata HDD systems.
    For /boot I would create a small 100mb Ext4 Logical partition. This partition cannot be inside LVM nor encrypted when using Grub1.  I'm not familiar with Grub2.

  • [SOLVE] Dual Boot Windows and ArchLinux with Syslinux

    Ok, i installed ArchLinux on my laptop with Windows XP (syslinux) and I cannot find get Windows to boot or mount it. I have tried to do what i can to do this but cannot. I Installed XP first like a should and something i think might be needed to know is after i created the partitions scheme (10Gb (boot partition), 50GB (XP), 80GB(was unallocated)). The installation disk formated both 2 partitions in NTFS but i installed XP on the second and Windows reported them as C and D drives. Windows being D. Thought that was bit werid thinking Windows installed the mbr on that partition. When I installed ArchLinux, it did have the boot flag set on 10GB (or C drive).
    Since I installed ArchLinux, I have been unable to find a solution to mounting/booting to Windows. Installed NTFS-3G and that didn't work when i tried mount /dev/sda3 windows and i did created a folder named windows but got ...
    mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/sda3,
    missing codepage or helper program, or other error
    In some cases useful info is found in syslog - try
    dmesg | tail or so.
    Tried dmesg | tail and got
    [ 76.524133] SGI XFS with ACLs, security attributes, realtime, large block/inode numbers, no debug enabled
    [ 179.468499] ACPI: \_SB_.PCI0.LPC0.ACAD: ACPI_NOTIFY_DEVICE_CHECK event: unsupported
    [ 705.472330] 8139too 0000:02:03.0 enp2s3: link down
    [ 717.380879] 8139too 0000:02:03.0 enp2s3: link up, 100Mbps, full-duplex, lpa 0x41E1
    [ 726.447184] 8139too 0000:02:03.0 enp2s3: link down
    [ 727.596128] ACPI: \_SB_.PCI0.LPC0.ACAD: ACPI_NOTIFY_BUS_CHECK event: unsupported
    [ 732.616138] 8139too 0000:02:03.0 enp2s3: link up, 100Mbps, full-duplex, lpa 0x41E1
    [ 733.848832] 8139too 0000:02:03.0 enp2s3: link down
    [ 834.062062] 8139too 0000:02:03.0 enp2s3: link up, 100Mbps, full-duplex, lpa 0x41E1
    [ 2131.449211] perf samples too long (2534 > 2500), lowering kernel.perf_event_max_sample_rate to 50100
    This is when i run sudo lsblk
    NAME MAJ:MIN RM SIZE RO TYPE MOUNTPOINT
    sda 8:0 0 149.1G 0 disk
    |-sda1 8:1 0 9.8G 0 part /boot
    |-sda2 8:2 0 1K 0 part
    |-sda3 8:3 0 53.6G 0 part
    `-sda5 8:5 0 85.7G 0 part /
    sr0 11:0 1 1024M 0 rom
    My syslinux is
    LABEL arch
    MENU LABEL Arch Linux
    LINUX ../vmlinuz-linux
    APPEND root=/dev/sda5 rw
    INITRD ../initramfs-linux.img
    LABEL windows
    MENU LABEL Windows
    COM32 chain.c32
    APPEND hd0 3
    NOTE: chain is in the same directory with syslinux
    I really think Windows got corrupted but not sure. Thought about repairing the mbr on windows and booting to it then reinstall syslinux but really don't want too.
    Thanks in advance
    Last edited by jag-ster (2014-11-27 02:12:12)

    Here is the partition table:
    /dev/sda1 one HUGE linux /boot primary partition (assuming ext4)
    /dev/sda2 "name" of the extended partition
    /dev/sda3 primary Windows partition (assuming NTFS)
    /dev/sda5 logical Linux root partition (assuming ext4)
    /dev/sda1 to /dev/sda4 are either all primary, or three primary and one extended. After /dev/sda4 all partitions are logical. If you're still wondering why is there no /dev/sda4, it's because you have 2 primary and one extended, so /dev/sda4 is reserved for another primary partition.
    Windows problem:
    The /dev/sda1 which Windows named C: is Windows equivalent of linux /boot. When you told linux to place its /boot on /dev/sda1 it formated boot files of Windows. Now you have Windows OS with no kernel. In other words there is no way to boot Windows if you don't reinstall it. Actually there is a way, but you would than screw up Arch.
    Mounting problem:
    You can never mount extended partition, only logical (an extended partition is made of logical partitions). You want to do:
    sudo mount /dev/sda3 -t NTFS-3g -o rw,uid=YourUserName /path/where/you/want/this/partition/mounted
    EDIT:
    Try it this way:
    - Backup all your data
    - Delete every partition
    - Start Windows installation
    - Make only one partition (c:/ for Windows)
    - Let Windows make another partition
    - Make one more so you could have a data partition, which does not need to be formated to reinstall Windows
    - Start Arch installation
    - Get to partitioning
        =Partitioning=
        - /dev/sda4 extended (take the rest of the drive)
        - /dev/sda5 logical /boot 512MiB
        - /dev/sda6 logical /          20GiB
        - /dev/sda7 logical /home (the rest)
    Making a separate /home partition will come in handy when reinstalling Arch (any linux distribution), or switching between distros, because it is the equivalent of D:/ in Windows. Also consider LVM.
    Last edited by bstaletic (2014-02-28 23:25:33)

  • Dual Boot XP and Vista (L305-S5944)

    I have got XP Pro on it and Vista which came installed... and used the VistaBootPro on the computer to choose between the two... but when I loaded that up it will now nolonger load XP. It said that i need a NTLDR file well i fixed that and now right when it starts to load XP it flashes the BLUE SCREEN not even a full second then reboots... I am lost now....
    PLEASE HELP>>>

    Satellite L305-S5944 
    Maybe you should begin again.
     How to dual boot Vista and XP (with Vista installed first) -- the step-by-step guide with screenshot...
    -Jerry

  • Dual boot Windows and Linux?

    I recently bought a T61, and will be taking a programming course.  One prof I spoke with said they ask us to use Unix tools, so one option is to dual boot linux and Windows.  I haven't decided yet whether I will keep Windows Ultimate, or go to XP for this.  But I was wondering how easy/hard is it to make this work, and what kind of steps need to be taken?   If you could point me towards any good tutorials/guides that would be appreciated too.
    Also, I have never really used linux, so which version is best?  I will be needing it for programming, but also still want to do the basics like web surfing, music, dvd's, burning discs, etc.  I have an old copy of Ubuntu that I never used, but its probably about 4 years old.  Is this still acceptable or will I need something newer?
    Message Edited by amace on 05-29-2008 01:28 PM
    T61 15.4" T9300 (2.5GHz 6MB L2) Windows 7 Professional x64 4GB Memory, NVidia Quadro NVS 140M

    Hi,
    If it's just a couple of programming courses that you are going to take I suggest you'd try out VMware player:
    http://www.vmware.com/products/player/
    You can get this software for free and since your system packs a lot of punch it will be able to run it smoothly without any hassle. I'm an engineering grad student and I have to do alot of programming. I've used VMware player before to do some software developement in Ubuntu when I didn't have enough HD to install dual boot but still couldn't do all my other stuff without XP.
    VMware Ubuntu will need a bit of fiddling to get it work just right (USB devices, etc) but it shouldn't be harder than installing a dual boot (actually it is alot easier for my opinion). The only down side is that file sharing between VMware and Windows can be somewhat difficult. I used an external USB drive to share my files but you could always set up Samba to handle file sharing.
    I hope this helps out with your decision.

  • Dual Booting Windows and Solaris

    Hi
    how do i dual boot windows and solaris
    Do i install windows first and then solaris or do it the other way around..?
    how do i make sure that Windows and Solaris appear in my boot options..?
    Is their a guide on doing this...?
    Thanks
    Liam

    Hey I did a quick google search for you. So I havent tried this method myself but it sounds reasonable.
    The text below is from the following link:
    http://www.hccfl.edu/pollock/AUnix1/DualBoot.htm
    "Solaris boot loader
    Partition the drive to leave at least 2GB of space available for Solaris;
    more drive space is desirable.
    As with Linux, install Windows first then Solaris.
    Do not use the Installation CD but boot and install
    from Software CD 1.
    If you accept the default partitioning scheme which
    the installer provides you will soon run out of space in
    your / and /usr partitions since only enough space is
    allocated to install the system.
    All extra space is allocated to /export/home.
    A typical installation on a 4.5GB partition might look
    something like this:
    Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
    /dev/dsk/c0d0s0 900M 536M 310M 64% /
    /dev/dsk/c0d0s1 334M 109M 192M 36% /var
    swap 671M 8.0k 671M 1% /var/run
    swap 671M 8.0k 671M 1% /tmp
    /dev/dsk/c0d0s5 845M 222M 565M 29% /opt
    # (FAT32 partition):
    /dev/dsk/c0d0p0:1 5.0G 3.3G 1.6G 66% /c
    /dev/dsk/c0d0s7 1.1G 92M 954M 9% /export/home
    /dev/dsk/c0d0s4 752M 225M 474M 33% /usr/local
    The Solaris boot selector enables you to choose either
    Solaris or Windows with Solaris as the default.
    (I prefer grub or lilo!)
    To mount FAT under Solaris:
    # mount -F pcfs /dev/dsk/c0d0p0:c /dos (or �:1�?)
    And the vfstab file:
    /dev/dsk/c0d0p0:c - /dos pcfs - yes -
    To create a GRUB boot floppy, follow these steps:
    $ mkfs -t ext2 /dev/fd0
    $ mount /dev/fd0 /mnt/fd0
    $ mkdir /mnt/fd0/boot /mnt/fd0/boot/grub
    $ cp /boot/grub/stage[12] /boot/grub/grub.conf \
    > /mnt/fd0/boot/grub
    $ /sbin/grub --batch <
    Hope this helps!
    /Oscar

  • [Success] Dual Booting Arch and Windows 7 [Advice / Confirmation]

    So I have been trying to get Starcraft II to work with wine and no luck.
    I have decided to install windows back on my computer, besides it might come in handy since I'm heading back to school soon.
    Anyways I have tried dual booting arch and windows in the past, and my results have never been stable.
    Today I will try using the program gparted.
    Let me give you my thoughts on how I plan to go through this and please give me some advice so I don't loose everything I have worked for on my linux box
    1.Currently I have two hard drives, one for all my main programs and one for my media files (mounting usb, dvd, etc, and it actually has no files in it xD).
       I plan to use gparted to re-size my second harddrive (media drive), create an extended partition, and a logical ntfs partition within it.
    2.I pop in my windows cd that I recieved with my laptop and install it on the space I have partitioned for windows.
    3. If my grub gets wiped out my windows (which I hope it doesn't not sure how the MBR stuff works) I insert a Ubuntu live cd and do
    sudo grub
    > root (hd0,0)
    > setup (hd0)
    > exit
    4.Configure grub to boot windows 7.
    5.Be happy with no headache.
    SO....
    If someone with past experience with dual booting windows and arch could please give me some advice, as I do not want to lose all my data, start over, and have another headache.
    I know I must learn to backup arch, which I will before september.
    But if anyone has any protips, or sees a flaw in my plan please point it out!!!
    Thank you very much for taking the time to read this and even more if advice has been given to boost my confidence!
    For now I will wait
    Thank you fellow archies.
    Last edited by Jabrick (2011-07-03 01:29:36)

    satanselbow wrote:
    1) Windows must be installed to a primary partition - attempting to install it to an logical partition will result in an epic fail
    2) Physically disconnect the harddrive you do not want windows on as windows typically installs the bootloader on the 1st hardisk (ie /sda) regardless of installation drive (ie /sdb)
    3 / 4) Complete the windows installation then reattached your Arch drive and edit /boot/grub/menu.lst (as root) pointing the W7 entry to (hd1,0) - no need to reinstall grub
    5) Hey it's windows - anything could happen
    If you create an NTFS partition right at the beginning of the the drive before you start the W7 install you can prevent it greedily using up 2 of you 4 primary partitions - I would also completely update you new W7 installation past SP1 before reattaching the other drive to further prevent W7 going mental
    satanselbow thank you so much!
    Everything works great I had no stumbles, and I hope no problems in the future!!
    I will post exactly what I did in case someone has the same issue.
    1. Partition you're secondary harddrive as primary ntfs with gparted
    2. Reboot, and if you get a file system check error, check you're udev rules. (For my case in particular I had to change the udev rules I got for auto mounting usb, ext harddrive, etc.
    3.Power off your computer and physically remove the harddrive that contains all your linux goodies
    4. Plug in your windows cd and install in the partition you created
    5. Update your windows OS
    6. Plug in Ubuntu live CD and reboot
    7. Use commands to get grub to overwrite the windows boot loader (In my case I put grub everyone hd0,0 hd0,1 just to be sure, but you might want to do things cleaner)
    8. Reboot and see if grub loads up
    9. Use Ubuntu live CD again and launch Gparted, select the boot to your extra linux space (if you had one, not sure if this is needed)
    10. Plug in your linux harddrive and reconfigure /boot/grub/menu.lst and your good to go
    Once again shout outs to satanselbow!!! For without him I might've failed brutally!
    Cheers!

  • Dual booting Arch and Ubuntu

    Hi, I would like to dual boot Arch and Ubuntu using GRUB2.
    I already have Arch, set up as it's described in the Beginner's Guide, with GRUB2 installed. How would I go about dual booting Ubuntu, preferably without overwriting the existing bootloader?
    I haven't tried anything yet, but the problem that I can see is resizing my /home; is this possible on the Ubuntu liveDVD? If not, would I be able to resize /home with my gParted liveCD?
    Unfortunately, I have no backup media to use, so I wouldn't be able to transfer anything away as a backup.
    Here is my partition table:
    %lsblk
    NAME   MAJ:MIN RM   SIZE       RO TYPE      MOUNTPOINT
    sda      8:0       0        931.5G   0    disk
    ├─sda1   8:1    0        30G        0    part       /
    ├─sda2   8:2    0        12G        0    part       [SWAP]
    ├─sda3   8:3    0        5M          0    part
    └─sda4   8:4    0        889.5G   0    part       /home
    sda1 is my root partition, sda2 is swap, sda3 is GRUB's boot partition, which I was told that I needed in the guide, and sda4 (/home) occupies the "rest of the disk".
    I am using a GPT-partitioned drive, as I read this has many advantages and I do not plan to triple-boot Windows.
    So, can someone tell me what I do if I want to dual boot Ubuntu? I'm very sorry if this should have been posted on the Ubuntu forums, but I'm just more familiar with Arch, and I already have it installed. Please ask if you need any other files like my fstab. I have my Ubuntu liveDVD, GParted live CD (and Arch CD) at hand.
    Thanks in advance, rberyl.
    (Also, does anyone else think it's a bit of a backwards thing to put the output of "date -u +%W$(uname)|sha256sum|sed 's/\W//g'" as a sign-up question? )
    Last edited by rberyl (2012-12-29 11:45:23)

    Hi rberyl,
    You can change your partitions using an inbuilt tool like cfdisk, or if you'd prefer a GUI gparted can be installed from the Arch repos. This will allow you to shrink sda4, and set up the new partitions for your Ubuntu OS. Although this shouldn't cause any data loss, its best practice to back up just in case.
    When installing Ubuntu, be sure to opt-out of bootloader creation. I think you have to use the alternate installation media to get this option. You can add your Ubuntu partition to the existing bootloader by running osprober (available from the repos) and then running grub-mkconfig -o /boot/grub/grub.cfg . Alternatively, you can manually edit your GRUB config. See https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GR … NU.2FLinux for instructions.
    Good luck!
    Last edited by smazza (2012-12-29 16:04:08)

  • Dual Boot Windows7 and OSX on an HP 2140

    I thought this was a great blog from networkjew.com about creating a Dual Boot Windows7 and OSX on an HP 2140.
    Now that you’ve got your sleek little HP 2140 netbook, its time to blow away Windows XP and put something a bit snazzier on there.  I’ve toyed with OSX86 previously, and knew that most of the netbooks out there support it in one way or another, and many of them quite well. I had also read that Windows 7 played very nicely on these tiny computers, and it’s free for a few months, so why not?
    Here’s how I made it work – there may be better ways, but this worked for me, mostly:
    HP Product Expert for the Officejet Pro X Series.
    Was your question answered? Mark it as an Accepted Solution!
    See a great post? Give it a Kudos!

    Windows 7 runs great on the 2140. I actually haven't had a chance to test all hardware functionality, but its nice and snappy; and as far as I can tell, all the hardware was recognized right out of the box. I loaded several of the Vista drivers/software from the HP support website and a few of them failed, but many installed just fine. I forgot to note which ones, unfortunately. 
    Great netbook.

  • Dual Boot Vista and Arch

    Hey, I am attempting to set up my laptop to dual boot Windows Vista and Arch Linux.
    The problem I'm having is after installing Arch my laptop still boots windows w/o going to the grub
    I started with having Windows Vista installed on the laptop, and then shrank down the partition with vista by 30 gigs for Arch.
    I was following the Arch setup guide in the wiki along with the Dual Boot Windows and Arch guide in the wiki [wiki]Windows_and_Arch_Dual_Boot[/wiki].
    My partitioning Scheme is:
    /dev/sda1    1.46 gb (some sort of toshiba recovery partition I believe)
    /dev/sda2    117.8 gb (Vista Partition)
    /dev/sda3    1 gb (Swap partition)
    /dev/sda4    29 gb /root partition
    According to the Dual Boot wiki article, I should install the grub to /boot, which in my case is in /root which I did.
    The thing that confuses me about this is if I install the grub to /boot how do I get the grub to boot before the windows MBR?
    Thanks in advanced

    Mclarenf1905 wrote:
    Hey, I am attempting to set up my laptop to dual boot Windows Vista and Arch Linux.
    The problem I'm having is after installing Arch my laptop still boots windows w/o going to the grub
    I started with having Windows Vista installed on the laptop, and then shrank down the partition with vista by 30 gigs for Arch.
    I was following the Arch setup guide in the wiki along with the Dual Boot Windows and Arch guide in the wiki [wiki]Windows_and_Arch_Dual_Boot[/wiki].
    My partitioning Scheme is:
    /dev/sda1    1.46 gb (some sort of toshiba recovery partition I believe)
    /dev/sda2    117.8 gb (Vista Partition)
    /dev/sda3    1 gb (Swap partition)
    /dev/sda4    29 gb /root partition
    According to the Dual Boot wiki article, I should install the grub to /boot, which in my case is in /root which I did.
    The thing that confuses me about this is if I install the grub to /boot how do I get the grub to boot before the windows MBR?
    Thanks in advanced
    It still works fine. It doesn't matter if its not in root directory. Others linux OSes  have their bootloaders in the same directory and it manages to boot just fine.

  • [SOS]Which mac mini device can install dual boot(Lion and Mt Lion)?

    Salutations!
    Due to my assignment, I need to get mac mini device which support dual boot.
    Which mac mini device model/firmware can we install dual boot(Lion and Mt Lion) on it?
    I got late 2012 one, but it looks like it does not support.
    Please help me.
    Thank you so much,
    TriQuang

    Hi Niel,
    Thank you for your fast reply. So if I buy mac mini MC815 model, which comes with preinstalled Lion I can run dual boot(Lion and Mt Lion)?
    I have one more question: Can I install Mac OS 10.6 on that mini device? If it's not supported which mac mini model can I get to support Snow Leopard and Lion and Mt Lion?
    Thanks and best regards,
    TriQuang

  • Pre-configured dual-boot Ubuntu and Windows

    Of possible interest to the Linux folks: A newly opened Laptops with purpose store is now offering several popular ThinkPad models fully pre-configured with dual-boot Ubuntu Linux and Windows.
    These systems come with a lot of pre-installed applications, see Dual boot Linux and Windows page for details.
    At the moment, we are working on specific solutions for students, educators, scientists, designers...
    Would love to have some feedback from the community on the existing offerings as well as suggestions/wishes for the future ones.

    That would be fine if some hp machines didn't have broken UEFI that don't respect setting the default OS.

  • Dual-Boot Your HP TouchSmart With Windows Vista and Windows 7 in Three Easy Steps

    Good article on creating a dual-boot environment. Here
    HP Product Expert for the Officejet Pro X Series.
    Was your question answered? Mark it as an Accepted Solution!
    See a great post? Give it a Kudos!

    claudecat87 wrote:
     We have two computers in the office, and i am usually on our dell comp, while my bf uses the touchsmart. We just came home to find that our computer had shut itself off on its own. upon starting it, the computer would only get as far as showing the HP screen (a blue screen with a hand and objects flowing from the hand) and the four menu options { F10: setup" esc: boot menu' F11 system recovery F9 :diagnostics}. At the bottom right side of the screen it also says v 5.10. Now, when we have pressed any of the options, the computer does nothing. It would appear that perhaps the computer can not tell windows 7 to boot or something. Unfortunately we do not have the install disc either...  Any thoughts?
    Seems like it's stuck at the POST Screen, and nothing's responding.
    I suggest removing all the USB and peripherals plugged into the PC and leave only the power and the USB keyboard receiver- nothing else.
    Then try turning on the computer, if it doesn't work, I don't think there's any fix except to keep trying.
    If you can get in, i suggest making a backup as soon as you can.
    After that, if it still does it, then call HP at 1-866-408-5408 or chat with them at : http://welcome.hp.com/country/us/en/contact/chat_1.html
    I have more HP devices than you'd expect.
    1 HP TouchPad 32 GB with Android
    2 HP Touchsmarts (310-1000z and IQ527)
    2 HP Printers (J6480 and J5750)
    1 Laptop (HP DV6253CL)
    Have at least some experience in each of those devices, and i'll do my best to help you.
    Kudos if I helped!

  • Dual boot Windows 8.1 with Yosemite

    I'm attempting to dual boot Windows 8.1 on my parents iMac. I downloaded and successfully used Boot Camp 5 to partition the drive, giving the new section 50GB. I successfully installed Windows 8.1. Unfortunate now I cannot access the Yosemite partition. Boot Camp is not available in the Windows 8.1 I just installed, so the obvious option to use Boot Camp to reboot into OS X is not available. I tried downloading Boot Camp in Windows, but it won't install - error message indicates there is no location to install it to. I tried to restarting and holding the option key 12 separate times, it always boots into Windows without bringing up the any other option. I tried booting into safe mode and resting the PRAM several times, same outcome of booting into Windows; although Windows did not always boot it froze half the time. The idea was just be able to run some Windows games without purchasing another computer. Any ideas on what went wrong and how to fix it?

    You do not need the Boot Camp drivers on Windows in order to start up in OS X. However, note that the option to start up with the Option (Alt) key is more tricky in those computers with a Bluetooth keyboard, such as the iMac.
    In order to start up in OS X, you have to press the Option key since the startup sound has finished (if you do it before, your Mac will not recognize it) and hold it until you see all bootable partitions in the screen. Then, choose your OS X volume.
    If you could not install the Boot Camp drivers in Windows, open Boot Camp Assistant after starting up in OS X and follow its steps (you will need a USB drive to save your drivers). Finally, start up in Windows, access to your USB drive through Windows Explorer and run the installer.

  • Dual Boot Ubuntu and Windows 8.1 on HP ENVY dv7

    Okay, I've installed 14.04 LTS with EFI and Secure Boot enabled. My problem is that the HP automated boot process ignores the presence of Ubuntu and boots directly into Windows. The only way I can boot into Ubuntu is to intercept the boot process by pressing the Escape key immediately, selecting Boot Device options (F9). choosing "Boot from EFI File", then pressing Enter on the next page (a description of the hard drive), choose EFI from the next screen, select "<ubuntu>" from the subsequent list, the select "shimx64.efi" from the next screen, which gives me the Grub list (without, I might add, any reference to Windows!) So, while it works, it is a laborious process at best. Have tried to follow the following post from an HP help forum:
    So, until HP releases an updated UEFI that allows turning this "feature" off or rearranging boot options through the F10 UEFI setup, this is what you can do to get dual boot with the least amount of hackiness:
    In Windows, mount the UEFI partition (mountvol S: /S mounts it as the S: drive) and copy the file \EFI\Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi to use some other name (for example, I copied it to "\EFI\Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi~", but you can change the name to anything else).
    In the Windows command prompt, update the Windows UEFI entry to point to the new name: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} path \EFI\Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi~ (adapt to your set name accordingly).
    Optionally, change the name of the Windows boot loader so that you would be certain that it points to the new file location: bcdedit /set {bootmgr} description "Fixed Windows path"
    Install the other OS. In my case the bootloader was installed into \EFI\opensuse\grubx64.efi.
    Delete the two files, \EFI\Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi and \EFI\Boot\bootx64.efi.
    Use efibootmgr to delete the "OS boot Manager" entry: sudo efibootmgr -b 0000 -B
    Set the new OS bootloader to be the default bootloader by using efibootmgr with the -o option. In my case, I had an entry called "opensuse" in slot Boot0001 and the updated path Windows entry in slot Boot0002, so I had to do sudo efibootmgr -o 0001,0002
    Update GRUB to point the Windows entry to your renamed file (you'll have to create a new file in /etc/grub.d and rerun grub-mkconfig).
    Was able to do everything as posted except "Delete OS boot Manager", because there is no entry for that item when I run efibootmgr in Ubuntu terminal. I did reorder the boot order using efibootmgr so that Ubuntu was first and Windows was second, but the HP OS boot Manager changes it back!
    Would really appreciate any help.  Thanks in advance.
    SamJ20109

    Hey vikas_g,
    Welcome to the HP Forums!
    With Ubuntu not recognizing your partitions during installation, some information that may be of assistance to you, could be in this document 'Frequently Asked Questions About Linux (FAQs)'.
    If your question is not answered from this document, I would suggest asking your question on the Ubuntu Forums.
    I hope this information helps!
    I worked on behalf of HP

Maybe you are looking for