Setting up for dual-boot capability

Hope this is the right forum... I want dual-boot capability between XP and JDS. Is there a document somewhere I'm not reading? I can't find it on the documentation CD that came with the product.and I'm worried about deleting my XP system during install. Thanks.

Never mind... I found the LinuxForum. Very rich with info.

Similar Messages

  • Setting up a "Dual Boot" system by adding Lion to an external HD

    I had originally thought to put my present Snow Leopard with Parallels OS's on an external HD the upgrading my internal HD to Lion in order to retain my Classic Application (AppleWorks in particular) capability for access to about a thousand old AppleWorks documents, all three genre-WP,SS,Graphics.  I just received my new hard drive and it suddenly occurreced to me that it would probably be better to add Mountain Lion to the external drive rather than fiddle with the setup/contents of my internal drive.
    In this regard, once I purchase Mountain Lion, what would be the procedures to create this dual boot capability after partitioning my External drive to receive Lion on one partition?
    Also, once the system is in place, how to move certain applications, and their associated document files, over to be used on Mountain Lion?
    Sparkgapper

    With Mountain Lion on the External, how does that creat a Dual Boot capability?
    I will not be doing anything to the internal drive with Snow Leopard other than setting up the dual boot.
    Sparkgapper

  • Partitioning a disk for dual boot

    My system disk failed last week. The media just stopped holding a proper magnetic charge so I ended up with loads of bad blocks.
    The disk was 120 GB in size.
    I replaced it with a 500 GB model. But I didn't need the extra space for the system disk so I partitioned it into 2 drives (Mac OS Extended). The first one I set to 185 GB and the second one I made 300 GB. The rest of the space was lost due to rounding.
    I restored the 185 GB partition from my backup copy (Retrospect 5) and was quite satisfied with the results - Mac OS 9.2.2. I also was able to access the other (empty) partition successfully.
    I booted the system into 9.2.2 from partition #1 and decided to install OS X on the larger partition. So I loaded up the Tiger Install disk #1. The install process started but when I was asked to select a target drive the empty second partition was not in the list of choices.
    Why?
    I want to have a dual boot capability on the single drive. How do I do that?
    Gary

    Not all G4s supported drives greater than 128 GB:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT2544
    http://lowendmac.com/2005/how-big-hard-drive-imac-emac-power-mac-powerbook-ibook /

  • How do i set up a dual boot with windows

    I am trying to set up a dual boot system with both the snow leapard and win 7,  I have partioned the drive and have windows booting up.  How do I get the drivers for the machine that windows will recognize.  I am researching this for my dad his I mac is one of the new 21 inch models.

    If you want dual boot you would use Boot Camp which is built into Snow Leopard. You will need a license of WIndows 7. You can install it by using Boot Camp Assistant however prior to doing so you probably should look at how it's correctly done, here is a You Tube Boot Camp instructions video I would recommend you watch first.
    If your dad wants to run Windows 7 & OS X simultaneously then he will need either Parallels or VMWare Fusion. Both are virtualization applications that allow one to run Windows and OS X side by side. This is a great solution unless he is a gamer or needs to run graphics intensive applications like CAD/CAM or 3D Games or anything that is 3D intensive. For all other types of applications virtualization is an excellent solution.
    If you choose the Boot Camp solution there is a forum specifically for that which is where I'd recommend posting questions.
    Roger

  • How do I set up a dual boot with 10.8 and 10.7

    I want to set u a dual boot system using so10.8 and os 10.7 I have my disk for 10.7 and 10.8 is curently my os. I have an empety hard drive partition I want to install 10.7 on to but when I try to start up my computer with the instalation disk it gives me the "this computer needs to restart please push and hold your power button" message. Can any one help?
    Thank you
    Mike

    How to create an OS X Lion installation disc
    OS X Lion Install to Different Drive
    Your system (OS) selection of where has to be done BEFORE any restart.
    And you want to backup and retain a copy of the installer ".ESD" package first.
    On restart it will self destruct the package.
    A clean install on another drive or another partition.
    I prefer to go with pulling the old drive.
    Always retain backup boot ability and dual drive dual boot is just... safer.
    If you're looking for an OSX installation disc, and, like me, you upgraded to Lion through the app store, you will have to go through a back-door process in order to create this disc. Here's an article on this. http://www.macworld.com/article/161069/2011/07/make_a_bootable_lion_installer.ht ml (I can't guarantee it works. I made a disc like this because I thought I needed it to reload from a Time Machine backup, but it turns out that Lion doesn't require the disc for this, so I never used it.)
    When I installed Boot Camp and Windows, I didn't need the OSX installation disc. I'm not sure why you would, in this process. It should only ask for your Windows disc.
    If for some reason you downloaded Windows from Microsoft instead of buying a package with a disc, you need to download the ISO version and burn it to a DVD. See this article on downloading the ISO: http://www.mydigitallife.info/windows-7-iso-x86-and-x64-official-direct-download -links-ultimate-professional-and-home-premium/ (Make sure you choose the ISO that matches the version you bought).
    Here's instructions on burning an ISO with Disk Utility: http://lifehacker.com/251758/mac-tip--how-to-burn-an-iso-or-dmg-file-to-disc And this thread on burning a Windows DVD in OSX: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/2039118?start=0&tstart=0 (Summary: you can use Disk Utility to burn the ISO, but choose a slow burn speed)

  • How to add another operating system for Dual boot in Windows 7 boot configuration

    Hi,
    I have dell laptop with excellent configuration. On which i had windows 7 Home premium on C Drive and Windows server 2008 on D Drive.
    Now i upgraded my Windows 7 Home Premium 32 bit to Windows 7 Ultimate 64 bit. But after fresh installation of Win 7 Ultimate my dual boot screen has gone and Win 7 is getting start directly.
    Now i want to add my Windows server 2008 again for dual boot which is still on D Drive.
    Can anyone please tell me how to add windows 2008 boot option in boot configuration to active my dual boot options.
    Thanks

    1) Using bcdedit.exe /enum
    To enable the computer to also boot Windows 7 you again use bcdedit.exe with the following command which will copy the current Windows
    Boot Loader details for Windows Server 2008 to Windows 7.
     bcdedit.exe /copy
    {current} /d "Microsoft Windows 7"
     bcdedit.exe will
    respond with something like the following.
    The
    entry was successfully copied to {................................}.
    Using
    bcdedit.exe /enum to again enumerate through the current entries within the BCD store you'll see the newly added entry.
    Before you can use the newly created Windows boot loader configuration, you'll need to change the partition for Windows 7 using
    the following two bcdedit.exe commands.
    bcdedit.exe /set {.................................} device partition=D:
    bcdedit.exe /set {.................................} osdevice partition=D:
    If you now reboot the system you should now be able to boot into either Windows Server 2008 or Windows 7.

  • Attempted to install windows 7 for dual boot but OSX installation now missing???

    I've tried to install Wndows 7 on my macbook air for dual boot but got the kernal error on boot.
    I loaded from the CD again and it sucessfully installed win 7 but when I start the macbook air up it only appears to have windows installed?
    How can I get my OSX back?

    For some odd reason when you use bootcamp to install the second OS bootcamp is defaulted as the primary OS you will need to hold option key to select the apple OS then in the sys preference under startup disk select apple as primary.

  • Help needed for Dual Booting purpose.

    If I want to install Windows 8.1 Enterprise and Windows Server 2012 R2 together for dual booting purpose, then which OS should be installed
    first to get a successful dual boot configuration.. Please help me regarding this matter..

    This one may help.
    http://blogs.technet.com/b/blainbar/archive/2012/09/25/step-by-step-4-ways-to-dual-boot-microsoft-windows-8-and-windows-server-2012-with-or-without-windows-7.aspx
    Regards, Dave Patrick ....
    Microsoft Certified Professional
    Microsoft MVP [Windows]
    Disclaimer: This posting is provided "AS IS" with no warranties or guarantees , and confers no rights.

  • How to install Arch for dual-boot with Win 7 (on 2 hard drives)?

    Hello,
    the TLDR first: how exactly should I proceed when setting up GRUB for 2 hard drives to dual-boot Arch (64 bit)and Win 7 (64 bit)?
    Long version: So, I have the following hard drive & partition layout:
    On my first hard drive (250 GB big) I have: Win 7 64 bit, all the programs for Windows and of course the EFI partition
    My second hard drive is 1 TB big and formatted in NTFS and it only contains data. It has 2 partitions, one is about 750 GB big and used for simple storage.
    Sidenote 1: sometimes my disk management (Windows' own gparted) shows either the little disk or the big one as disk 0. Don't know what exactly this means, but I have never ever experienced any problems whatsoever during use.
    Sidenote 2: the UEFI motherboard (ASRock H67M) cannot boot into Legacy mode.
    I want to install Arch on a ~200 GB partition on the second hard drive (the one with 1 TB). (click here if you want to see a screenshot) I am posting this because I am confused with how exactly I should deal with the whole "2 hdds & UEFI" thing.
    So how exactly should I proceed when setting up GRUB for this setup?
    For partitioning I suppose I would have to use fdisk or cgdisk. I used cgdisk before and found it to be straightforward. Then, because I have experienced my fair share of problems with rEFInd, I'd like to use GRUB.
    Last edited by jones (2013-06-29 14:36:56)

    First thing you should do is become familiar with your motherboard.
    http://www.asrock.com/mb/manual.asp?Model=H67M
    This will probably help you out in understanding the sidenote 1 thingie (hdd's on sata3 and/or sata2 connectors)
    As on sidenote 2, according to the manual it seems to be possible to boot legacy mode,  see Storage Configuration.

  • Satellite S55t-B5233 Shrink disk for dual boot windows 8 and other OS

    Hi,
    I have a Toshiba Satellite S55t-B5233 Pre-installed with Windows 8.1
    I would like to maintain Windows 8 but to dual boot with Windows 7, Ubuntu and OpenSuse, so:
    - When I try to Shrink disk C (943371 MB) it says that 'Size of available shrink space in MB = 469651 MB'. The free space in my disk is 885240 MB!
    So I would like to know if there is a way to left about 200000 MB for Windows 8? so I could use the rest of space for shrinking for other OS...
    - I would instal windows 7, ubuntu and OpenSuse in partitions D, E and F [Partitions that I pretend to create by shrinking C] ... a) does it will void my warrantee? b) does it will render my Windows 8 “Recovery Partition” useless?
    thanks in advance...
    Gari

     
    Satellite S55t-B5233
    I don't recommend you attempt multiple-booting in this new UEFI/GPT world, Gari. Things are more difficult now than they were in the BIOS/MBR world. Best to set up virtual machines using Hyper-V or another free VM to run other OSes.
    In answer to your questions,..
    a. Toshiba doesn't care what you do with the software. They won't even look at the computer until the drive has been restored to its original out-of-the-box contents.
    b. After you mess around with the partition locations, I doubt the recovery partition would be accessible in the normal fashion if at all. Many create a recovery drive and delete the recovery partition first thing.

  • How to set time in Dual-boot config with Windows 8.1

    Hi,
    I have been trying to workaround this problem i am having with Arch linux and Windows 8.1 time settings.
    According to Installation guide on Wiki I set hardware clock to UTC and added my local time zone too.
    But my Windows 8.1 uses hardware clock a local time and it is really confusing me.
    I did tried to setup Windows 8.1 to use UTC (http://superuser.com/questions/494432/f … bios-clock)
    but that settings is not working on my side (most Windows 8.1 users are also getting the same problem)
    Please help.

    I have two laptops which are dual booted arch and Windows 8.1.  For both of those machines I set the Windows clock to be UTC instead of local using the method in https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Ti … in_Windows (i.e. creating the .reg file and executing it - take care that the .reg file is created correctly with the .reg extension or it won't execute).  I still allow Windows 8.1 to update its time from the network and it does not cause a problem, though the advice is to let Arch do the time synchronisation. (That may be because it is not yet summertime so I will also disable time sync in Windows before the change to summertime at the end of this month). I also followed the normal install advice for Arch and have the hardware clock in UTC, and have chrony set up to keep time in sync.  Additionally I use KDE and have my normal timezone with DST adjustments for summertime.  I have not had any problem with that way of working on either of my two machines.
    I presume that if the Windows clock registry hack is done after the dual boot install it should not matter but I made that change before installing Arch.
    Last edited by mcloaked (2014-03-21 10:46:04)

  • Partioning question for dual booting arch+ another distro

    I have a 320 partition w/ 100gigs win7 and 20 for /root arch, and rest for /home arch and a 500gig hd with data,media, pictures etc on it..
    I was thinking of dual booting Mint + arch.. mint for compatability, ubuntu base and stability and arch for bleeding edge+ speed
    I was thinking about 20 /root arch, 140 /home arch, 20 /root mint, 140(rest of hd) /home mint.. and using gparted to grab a 5 gig piece of the 500gig hd for /swap for both distros ( i have 6 gigs ram, i usually set swappiness to zero anyway, but i'm sure a swap is just a formality anyway)... and making the rest of the 500 accessable to both distros for my media and other stuff i have.
    is the above a good scheme ^^, does the size/order matter for what I want above? or should it be /root mint /root arch /home mint, /home arch.. 20/20/140/140 (sizes are approx of course)
    or would there be a "real advantage for making the 320 mint, 500 for arch.. and make 250 gigs of the 500 shared for media etc.. (20 arch / and 230 for /arch home)..
    I posted this in the newbie section, because of so many possibilities and I've read alot about partitioning, I just wonder whats the best, effecient way to do this, i'm sure some of you here dual boot 2 distros (hopefully on the same hd so my question is at least relevant)
    Thanks in advance for any help
    Last edited by binskipy2u (2013-01-02 10:32:43)

    It's your machine, so do whatever you want, because it's a very subjective matter. I have a 10 GB root ext4 without a separate /boot or /home (meaning that these folders are part of the root fs). But man, sometimes, a separate partition for /home can be a god-send. I experienced space issues countless times. Of course, it also depends on how much crap you install. If you install full-blown KDE and a bunch of games instead of something minimal like Openbox or a tiling WM, 10 GB are not enough. Wine also uses ~/.wine for games and such.
    See: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Partitioning
    I would probably share the home partition between the distributions (except with different user names, so that the settings don't overlap between bleeding-edge versions of the same packages).
    Have fun.
    You may also wanna look into LVM, which will allow on-the-fly resizing of the partitions.
    Last edited by DSpider (2013-01-02 11:59:34)

  • Setting up a dual-boot on an Indigo

    Now that my Indigo is on it's way, I'm looking for some advice on setting up an OS 9 - Panther dual boot.
    The current config: 366Mhz, 10GB HDD and I will be maxing out the RAM when it arrives (after the firmware update has been applied). It is running 9.2 and I have a full retail copy of Panther available.
    I may at some point upgrade the HDD, but for now would like to hold off. My guess is that I will need a full version of OS 9. I spoke with Apple and they don't have restore disks for that machine (the nice young woman on the phone gently suggested I get a newer machine-- LOL).
    Question 1: Will a retail version of 9 do the trick?
    Question 2: Can anyone point me to a step-by-step or give advice on how to proceed?
    Thanks in advance,
    JT

    Question 1: Will a retail version of 9 do the trick?
    Yes
    Question 2: Can anyone point me to a step-by-step or give advice on how to proceed?
    (a) Boot from the OS 9 install disc and install OS 9.
    (b) Download and install the OS 9 updates. KB 75288, Mac OS 9: Available Updates
    (c) Ensure that the firmware is up-to-date. If not install Firmware Update 4.1.7.
    (d) Boot from the OS X install disc and install OS X.

  • How to best partition the HDD for dual boot: Windows 8 & Linux

    Hi,
    I'm a newbie in Windows 8, linux, Partition....
    I would like to use my new laptop with windows 8 pre-installed to the following:
    Create a Dual Boot Windows 8 / Ubuntu
    Create on my C drive (unique drive on my laptop):
    *a partition for the system
    *one for Windows 8
    *one for Data and
    *last one for Ubuntu OS
    My aim is :
    -to install VmWare on Windows 8 and run Checkpoint Splat with virtual machines to perform CCSA labs.
    to install GNS3 on Ubuntu for CCNP labs but with GNS3 accessing files in the Data partition
    I have a Toshiba Satellite with 750Gb and 8 Go RAM.
    According to you what's the best size for my partitions?
    Is there a better way to partition my C drive regarding my aim?
    Best Regards
    ***I don't know if it's the right section, sorry for that. Feel free to move this thread in the appropriate section***

    Hi,
    Thank you all,
    Isn't it too much 200G for Windows as i will on ly install VMWARE Workstation 9 for lab purposes and possibly a few softwares.
    VMWARE installed on Windows will require 2 GB + 1 GB per host (i will use approximatively 15 hosts).
    Checkpoint products will be installed on VMWARE that is installed in Windows :
    - disk space needed for 3 Checkpoint gateways: 3*37 GB
    - disk space needed for 2 Checkpoint gateways management servers: 2*10 GB
    On Linux I'll install GNS3 with 10 GB disk space required and a few softwares.
    I've got a Toshiba stellite computer with Windows 8 pre-installed.
    Processor: Intel(R) Core(TM) i5-3210M CPU @2.5 Ghz
    RAM: 8 Go
    64 bits OS, processor x64
    See below the screenshot
    I've taken screenshot of my partition (below).
    * Don't take into account the disk 1 (E) partition
    Can u confirm that in Disk o, partitions with 450 Mo, 260 Mo and 9.48 Go are for recovery system?
    I am planning to let the recovery partition as it is and divide the TI30985500A (C) partition (688 Gb) into:
    - 200 Gb windows partition
    -100 Gb Linux partition
    -388 Gb data partition
    What do you think about this partionning regarding the informations i've provided above?
    Greets

  • Setting up a dual boot system with OS 9 and OS 10

    I am currently running OS 9.2 on the G4 and want to run OS 10.4 as a dual boot system. Can I go as far as 10.4 with dual boot? Is there any more to it than partitioning the system drive in two and installing the two OS's on the two partitions?

    Hi, Matt -
    Is there any more to it than partitioning the system drive in two and installing the two OS's on the two partitions?
    No.
    As Dave Hamilton said, if using OSX's Disk Utility to do the partitioning, be sure you select the option to install OS 9 drivers. If that option is not selected, then OS 9 will not be able to mount the volume(s), nor use one for booting.
    Reminder - partitioning a drive requires that it be re-initialized. This will erase everything on the drive, so be sure you have backed up anything you do not want to lose.
    And, be sure to select Mac OS Extended as the format for all partitions. That is the only format which can be used by both OS 9 and OSX for booting.
    <hr>
    Although many folk do partition a drive (or use two separate drives - your DA model is pre-equipped to accept a second internal drive), you do not need to do that in order to install OSX.
    OSX should install smoothly onto the same drive where OS 9 is located. There is no conflict between the two - machines which originally came with both OS 9 and OSX pre-installed had both installed on an unpartitioned drive.
    However, there are distinct advantages to having OS 9 and OSX on separate volumes or drives -
    • Maintenance and/or repair of each OS and its files is easier
    • Re-installation of either OS, should that ever be necessary, is easier
    • Startup Manager can be used

Maybe you are looking for

  • New Macbook Air wont recognise external HDD

    Hi, got a brand new Macbook Air with the latest OS (10.9.3), not recognising my Verbatim #53029 external HDD. The drive is still working fine on my old Mac Pro, and the USB is working fine on the Macbook Air. But when I connect the drive there's noth

  • Transferring itunes to a new computer

    i am transferring itunes from my windows xp to my new windows 7. how do i do it? thank you all very much for your time

  • Hiding Shared Folders in Mac OS X 10.5

    Dumb question: If I uncheck the Shared Folders option in System Preferences, will my computer even appear in Finder under Network on other peoples' Macs who are on the same network as me? Or will my computer simply show up, but those users won't be a

  • New Twitter app won't run?

    After owning an iPhone since gen1 - I know how to do most anything on one...but the new Twitter app just won't start? Got the update message in the iStore on the phone, d/l and then installed like always - there was no interupption to the install eit

  • Dull and pale printed photos

    I've just started to use an Epson Stylus Photo R2000 printer. But first trials are really disappointment. Colors are looking so dull and pale and a little bit dark. I use Epson Photo Paper Glossy and the appropriate profile in LR color management wit