Thinkpad t520 dual boot win 7 and arch + optimus issue

--today I got my first laptop and first thinkpad..... thinkpad t520 with the following specifications:-
intel i5 2520M - HD+ AG display (1600*900) - 4 gigs of ram - nvidia optimus -Hard disk 500Gigs 7200rpm - windows 7  and some other windows applications unfortunately a friend bought it for me so he bought it with alot of applications
--the problem is that I've been using arch linux for a year now, and I love it, no experience with laptops, and I intend to keep windows because I purchased for it and I want dual boot with arch so what is the right disk partitioning to install linux and keep windows untouched............ in my old desktop it was only arch and it was like that:
128 mb ext2 boot
2048 swap
50000 mb / ext4   and the rest of the disk for home folder, now with dual boot what is the right partitoning?
the second question Does bumblebee work fine with archlinux?
how to access bios?
Is there any thread to help to install arch on thinkpad t520 in details ?
Do I leave the battery always installed or what?
Last edited by big mac (2012-02-04 13:46:40)

the Arch partition should take some space from the windows7_os partition. You should keep the Lenovo_Recovery partition if you don't have a Windows installation DVD, or if you think you may want to reset your hard drive to its original state someday. In my laptop I have completely removed it.
I have a dual boot of Archlinux/Windows7, and I use the following partitioning
/dev/sda1   ntfs   60.0GiB   /media/C (for windows os)
/dev/sda2 (extended partition)
      /dev/sda3   swap   4.0GiB swap
      /dev/sda4   ext4    30.0GiB root
      /dev/sda5   ext4    30.0GiB home
/dev/sda6   ntfs   376GiB   /media/D
I use the last partition as a shared partition between Arch and Windows, for storing music and videos... I use it also for installing games, so that I  can play them either from windows or from Arch by using wine.
I'm not saying this is the best way to do it, but this has been working for me, also I don't use a separate /boot partition, I used to have it when I had multiple Linux distros, but with Arch alone I don't find it necessary.

Similar Messages

  • 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.

  • Thinkpad x130e dual boot Win 7 and 8

    So, I bought a new Seagate SSD Hybrid drive with the intention of dual booting Windows 7 and Windows 8.  However, upon using my restore DVD's to reinstall Windows 7 on the new drive I hit a snag when trying to install Windows 8.  The Win8 intall says that the drive needs to be GPT and it is currently MBR.  So after removing the partitions and changing the drive to GPT I re-restore the Win7 OS.  Then to my dismay I find that the drive has gone back to MBR during the restore proceedure.
    Is there a way to edit the restore proceedure so that it doesn't change the drive over to an MBR drive?
    Thanks,
    Matt

    the Arch partition should take some space from the windows7_os partition. You should keep the Lenovo_Recovery partition if you don't have a Windows installation DVD, or if you think you may want to reset your hard drive to its original state someday. In my laptop I have completely removed it.
    I have a dual boot of Archlinux/Windows7, and I use the following partitioning
    /dev/sda1   ntfs   60.0GiB   /media/C (for windows os)
    /dev/sda2 (extended partition)
          /dev/sda3   swap   4.0GiB swap
          /dev/sda4   ext4    30.0GiB root
          /dev/sda5   ext4    30.0GiB home
    /dev/sda6   ntfs   376GiB   /media/D
    I use the last partition as a shared partition between Arch and Windows, for storing music and videos... I use it also for installing games, so that I  can play them either from windows or from Arch by using wine.
    I'm not saying this is the best way to do it, but this has been working for me, also I don't use a separate /boot partition, I used to have it when I had multiple Linux distros, but with Arch alone I don't find it necessary.

  • Add'l Partitions to Dual-Boot Win 8/Arch Linux

    I'm hoping to get a dual-boot arrangement going on my refurbished Asus Q200E Netbook that Santa brought!
    Here's what the hard drive looks like now:
    Asus tells me the following:
    sda1: System Files to start
    sda2: Recovery
    sda3: OS automatically created when an OS is installed
    sda4: Operating System  [Clearly Win 8 is here]
    sda5: Unallocated space (and yet it's formatted and has 25.5 MB of data written on it)
    sda6: Add'l files for recovery
    What's the best approach to create my needed linux partitions?  Shrink sda4, and slide sda5 & sda6 to the left? 
    Any tips/suggestions/warnings would be greatly appreciated!    Does anyone know if my touchscreen will work under Arch...?
    Thanks in advance!
    Last edited by wilberfan (2013-12-28 00:32:21)

    wilberfan wrote:
    alezost wrote:I had similar partitions on my ASUS X75V except of your sda5 (i didn't have it).  I just shrank sda4 (from Windows8 just in case), and then i used the new space for ext4 partitions (this time i used gparted).
    I'm in the process of doing something similar (also using gparted).   Does your Asus have a touchscreen, and did it work after installing Arch? How many ext4 partitions did you use to install Arch?
    No, i don't have a touchscreen, i hope the wiki will help you with that.
    I just used 2 partitions (one for "/" and one for "/home").

  • Dual boot (Win XP - ARCH 0.8) / disk 80 GByte

    Hi,
    I am trying to setup DUAL Boot Windows-XP Archlinux on a Compaq nc6320
    I want to load linux  from the Window NT loader I have only a " - "  in the left uppercorner when I select --linux--
    [boot loader]
    timeout=30
    default=multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS
    [operating systems]
    multi(0)disk(0)rdisk(0)partition(1)\WINDOWS="Microsoft Windows XP Professional"
    c:\boot.lnx="-- Linux--"
    Although the boot.lnx is not a text file I could read .... è*·ëþGRUB ·Geom·Hard Disk·Read· Error·»·´Í¬<·uô÷··········
    I have a disk of 80 byte
    Sda1 NTFS Windows XP 40Gb
    Sda3   7 Mb  Grub Bootmanager  installed here (this was a unused space here)
    Sda2               
        Sda5 NTFS, about 26 Gbyte
        Sda6 /boot  130 Mb
        Sda7 swap  1024 Mb
        Sda8 /        9,7 Gb    > Arclinux 0.8
    I made the file boot.lnx this way
       dd if=/dev/sda3 of=boor.lnx bs=512 count=1
    Possible I have problems with the Cylindrer 1024 border ?
    Due to company base policy I would like to avoid changing MBR and first ntfs partiton.
    Any idea what oher solutions there are ? Thanks.
    I id not found LBA support in bios setup.
    http://www.geocities.com/epark/linux/gr … HOWTO.html
    Last edited by go4it (2007-01-29 15:29:33)

    Whenever I've put linux on the same disk as windows I've always used lilo to handle the booting by installing the linux bootloader to the "/root" of the linux partition, before that I would flag the partition as bootable with cfdisk while I was doing my partitioning and untoggle the boot flag for windows, this was also reversible so it never harmed my windows bootloader. 
    I would make an entry like this if I was using lilo:
    # Partition 3: Windows XP Home
        other = /dev/hda1
        label = WinXP
    and then run lilo for the change to stick.
    In grub I would imagine you would have to add something like this:
    title WindowsXP
        rootnoverify (hd0,0)
        chainloader +1
        makeactive
    I now just keep linux on its own seperate drive, to give you an idea how that works this is what my grub looked like last week, I repartitioned and only have arch on there now, so far..... , keep in mind my windows is actually on my second drive, hence the need for the "map" entries, reading up a bit on grub would be to your advantage, its hdd naming scheme is a bit confusing at first, but once ya get the hang of it you realise how powerful and usefull it can be, I love the password and fallback features. 
    # grub.conf generated by anaconda
    # Note that you do not have to rerun grub after making changes to this file
    # NOTICE: You do not have a /boot partition. This means that
    # all kernel and initrd paths are relative to /, eg.
    # root (hd0,1)
    # kernel /boot/kernel-genkernelreal_root=/dev/sda2
    # initrd /boot/initramfs-genkernel
    #boot=/dev/sda2
    default=0
    timeout=120
    splashimage=(hd0,1)/boot/grub/splash.xpm.gz
    password --md5 XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
    title Sabayon Linux x86 3.25
    root (hd0,1)
    kernel /boot/kernel-genkernel-x86-2.6.19-gentoo-r4 root=/dev/ram0 ramdisk=8192 real_root=/dev/sda2 quiet init=/linuxrc splash=silent,theme:sabayon CONSOLE=/dev/tty1 pci=nomsi vga=0x31b
    initrd /boot/initramfs-genkernel-x86-2.6.19-gentoo-r4
    title Windows XP Professional
    rootnoverify (hd1,0)
    map (hd0) (hd1)
    map (hd1) (hd0)
    chainloader +1
    makeactive
    title VectorLinux 5.8 Std Gold
    root (hd0,2)
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz root=/dev/sda3 ro vga=795
    title Arch Linux Voodoo
    root (hd0,4)
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sda5 ro vga=795
    initrd /boot/kernel26.img
    Last edited by RabidWolf (2007-01-31 12:32:39)

  • Dual Booting Windows and Arch (SOLVED!)

    Hello all, I'm having trouble getting a windows partition activated again. (Windows was on here for many years, then I installed arch on a separate partition.)
    Here is the layout of fdisk -l:
    Disk /dev/sda: 100.0 GB, 100030242816 bytes
    255 heads, 63 sectors/track, 12161 cylinders
    Units = cylinders of 16065 * 512 = 8225280 bytes
    Disk identifier: 0x00000000
       Device Boot      Start         End      Blocks   Id  System
    /dev/sda1   *           1        7833    62918541    7  HPFS/NTFS
    /dev/sda2            7834       12039    33784695   83  Linux
    /dev/sda3           12040       12161      979965   82  Linux swap / Solaris
    sda1 is the windows partition, and sda2 is the arch partition. The linux partition SHOULD be primary bootable (have the * next to it),but all my attempts to do this have failed. (I've used "testdisk" to change the flags, but for some reason it keeps reverting back to setting sda 1 as primary bootable after a reboot or 2).
    This is the pertinent section of /boot/grub/menu.lst:
    title  Arch Linux
    root   (hd0,1)
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/disk/by-uuid/f3be3baa-3b62-460c-8801-64b0b1cca$
    initrd /boot/kernel26.img
    # (1) Arch Linux
    title  Arch Linux Fallback
    root   (hd0,1)
    kernel /boot/vmlinuz26 root=/dev/disk/by-uuid/f3be3baa-3b62-460c-8801-64b0b1cca$
    initrd /boot/kernel26-fallback.img
    # (1) Windows
    title Windows XP
    rootnoverify (hd0,0)
    makeactive
    chainloader +1
    I have a . . . modified . . . copy of XP Professional, which comes with a recovery console to reinstall the MBR if it's necessary.
    From what I've researched, I somehow need to reinstall grub to the second partition, make the second partition primary bootable, then rewrite the MBR on the first partition, and correct any command errors in menu.lst, but I haven't really figure out a way to do it.
    Thanks in advance for your help!
    Last edited by mongoose088 (2008-12-20 21:48:18)

    I read up on some documentation of installing GRUB to the MBR.
    So far, I went into ArchLive (from the cd) and did the following
    grub> root (hd0,1)
    grub> setup (hd0)
    The installation reports success with no errors, but the problem persists. Arch linux will boot fine, but when I select XP it flashes my configuration, like so:
    title Windows XP
    rootnoverify (hd0,0)
    makeactive
    chainloader +1
    then kicks me back to the OS select GRUB screen. Did I install it to the wrong place?
    EDIT:
    I decided to issue this command:
    grub> setup(hd0,1)
    It reported some errors, then arch couldn't mount the ntfs partition because of possible MFT cluster errors.
    Using testdisk, I repaired the boot sector and MFT clusters, then using ArchLive reinstalled grub with grub>(hd0)
    Arch and Arch Fallback will boot correctly, but now the windows side shows an error:
    rootnoverify (hd0,0)
    makeactive
    chainloader +1
    Loading stage2Read Error (or something to this extent)
    I wonder if this error brings me closer or farther to a solution?
    Thanks for the replies so far!
    Last edited by mongoose088 (2008-12-20 05:41:43)

  • Dual boot (win 7 / arch) SSD non-UEFI motherboard

    I have a few questions about installing arch on my brand new intel 320. (:D)
    I plugged it in and partitioned 60GB for windows (leaving 50GB for linux). Installed windows fine, then read through the wiki about installing arch.
    I cannot use GPT as I have windows 7, and have to use the MBR method.
    Reading through the wiki, I have a sad feeling I'm going to have to start fresh and reinstall windows, because of the fdisk -H changing header size, and the way cylinders work out.
    Will I need to do a complete wipe already?
    Last edited by heleos (2011-11-04 20:30:28)

    heleos wrote:
    I have a few questions about installing arch on my brand new intel 320. (:D)
    I plugged it in and partitioned 60GB for windows (leaving 50GB for linux). Installed windows fine, then read through the wiki about installing arch.
    I cannot use GPT as I have windows 7, and have to use the MBR method.
    Reading through the wiki, I have a sad feeling I'm going to have to start fresh and reinstall windows, because of the fdisk -H changing header size, and the way cylinders work out.
    Will I need to do a complete wipe already?
    If you eally want to keep gpt, try http://www.rodsbooks.com/bios2uefi/index.html (check whether uefi duet boots in your system first). I think fdisk has the option of ignoring CHS values and use sectors exclusively.

  • Dual boot gentoo and arch

    Can someone help me with a grub entry I'll need for my Gentoo grub.conf to boot Arch?
    I want to skip the arch bootloader section on install, so I won't know what kernel is and stuff they use. (well, I guess I could mount the arch partition from gentoo to find out ).
    I'll be using the latest cdrom I guess.
    Ignore what partitions I'll use. I'm just not familiar how arch boots the kernel.
    Thx
    My current /boot/grub/grub.conf is:
    cat /boot/grub/grub.conf
    default 0
    timeout 10
    splashimage=(hd0,2)/boot/grub/splash.xpm.gz
    title=Gentoo Linux 2.6.20-r6
    root (hd0,2)
    kernel /boot/kernel-genkernel-x86-2.6.20-gentoo-r6 root=/dev/ram0 init=/linuxrc ramdisk=8192 real_root=/dev/sda6 udev
    initrd /boot/initramfs-genkernel-x86-2.6.20-gentoo-r6
    title=Windows Vista
    rootnoverify (hd0,0)
    makeactive
    chainloader +1

    I also have Arch and Gentoo, but I use the grub of Arch to boot. However the following is the menu.lst
    parts regarding Arch.
    # (0) Arch Linux
    title Arch Linux
    root (hd0,2)
    kernel /vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sda1 ro vga=773
    initrd /kernel26.img
    # (1) Arch Linux
    title Arch Linux Fallback
    root (hd0,2)
    kernel /vmlinuz26 root=/dev/sda1 ro
    initrd /kernel26-fallback.img

  • Dual booting win 7 and arch: cannot install grub to partition

    I have read the arch wiki page on dual booting and several other sources on line, but I am still struggling to get this to work.
    I am trying to dual boot arch and windows 7 on my lenovo ideapad s205. the machine comes with windows 7 pre-installed.
    I shrank the win 7 partition and added an extended partition with 3 logical partions for /boot, swap, and /.
    I am able to install and run arch by installing grub to the mbr. when I do this, though, I cannot boot windows. (the windows section of grub menu.lst is uncommented and points toward hda0,0. I have tried hda 0,1 as well).
    I have also tried to use the windows boot loader to load arch, as described in the arch wiki page on dual booting. The problem here is that, taking this approach, I should install grub to my /boot partition, but when I try to do this, the installer only allows me to install grub to sda or sdb (the usb stick).
    I have read that grub should be able to boot linux from a logical partition. Is this so?
    Is there something wrong with the arch installer that it is not giving me the option of installing to a partition rather than the mbr, or is this  a problem with my partition scheme, or something else?
    I am tempted to remove lenovo's recovery system, but on the other hand, I have already needed to use it several times while monkeying around with installing arch.
    Thanks for any help.
    UPDATE:
    I now have the laptop dual-booting win 7 and arch. My solution ( adapted from here: http://helms-deep.cable.nu/~rwh/blog/?p=177) was to:
    1. installed arch on the partitions I had created for it, but skipped the "install bootloader" stage.
    2. in win 7, I downloaded and installed EasyBCD and made an entry for arch in it. I checked the option to "Use EasyBCD's copy of GRUB"
    3. When I restarted, I got a grub error because the entry in grub's menu.lst was pointing at the wrong partitions for the kernel and root.
    4. So I went back into the arch live disk, mounted the boot partition and edited menu.lst.
    Now when I start the laptop, the windows boot loader starts and I can choose between win  7 and arch. when I select arch, grub4dos starts and gives me the option to start arch. this is not particularly elegant (nor is it fast), so I think this solution is less than ideal, but it does work.
    I'd be interestd in any thoughts about what went wrong and what a better solution would be.
    thanks.
    Last edited by ratchet (2011-10-10 19:09:16)

    ratchet wrote:II am able to install and run arch by installing grub to the mbr. when I do this, though, I cannot boot windows. (the windows section of grub menu.lst is uncommented and points toward hda0,0. I have tried hda 0,1 as well).
    Is this a typo in your post or how it was in menu.lst? Surely it should be hd0,0 and not hda0,0? The entry I have in my menu.lst is as follows:
    # (2) Windows
    title Windows
    rootnoverify (hd0,0)
    makeactive
    chainloader +1
    What was yours?
    Last edited by JHeaton (2011-10-10 20:18:22)

  • [SOLVED] Dual Boot Window 7 & Arch on a Uefi system.

    From the Wiki
    Windows 7 x86_64 versions support booting in x86_64 UEFI mode from GPT disk only, OR in BIOS mode from MBR/msdos disk only. They do not support IA32 (x86 32-bit) UEFI boot from GPT/MBR disk, x86_64 UEFI boot from MBR/msdos disk, or BIOS boot from GPT disk.
    I don't understand this. As stated in the title I have a ueif system so that means I have to create a GPT disk ? I already have a gpt disk which I confirmed by running Arch Live USB. Under type it said GPT. I don't understand this at all
    However if Arch is installed in BIOS-GPT in one disk and Windows is installed in BIOS-MBR mode in another disk,  then the BIOS bootloader used by Arch CAN boot the Windows in the other disk, if the bootloader itself has the ability to chainload from another disk.
    Note: If Arch and Windows are dual-booting from same disk, then Arch SHOULD follow the same firmware boot mode and partitioning combination used by the installed Windows in the disk.
    In the Note above it says both Arch and Windows follow the same boot mode if they are dual booting from same disk. I DO NOT want to do this. I have already decided to partition  my drive with 200 Gb going to Windows and 500 Gb going to Arch. Does this mean that I should install both in different modes i.e. Arch in Bios-GPT and Windows in Bios-MBR.
    The recommended way to setup a Linux/Windows dual booting system is to first install Windows, only using part of the disk for its partitions. When you have finished the Windows setup, boot into the Linux install environment where you can create additional partitions for Linux while leaving the existing Windows partitions untouched.
    UEFI systems
    Both Gummiboot and rEFInd autodetect Windows Boot Manager \EFI\Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi and show it in their boot menu, so there is no manual config required.
    For GRUB(2) follow GRUB#Windows_Installed_in_UEFI-GPT_Mode_menu_entry.
    Syslinux (as of version 6.02 and 6.03-pre9) and ELILO do not support chainloading other EFI applications, so they cannot be used to chainload \EFI\Microsoft\Boot\bootmgfw.efi .
    Computers that come with newer versions of Windows often have secure boot enabled. You will need to take extra steps to either disable secure boot or to make your installation media compatible with secure boot.
    Being a beginner should I go with Gummiboot then. GRUB made a mess last time.
    Also my secure boot is NOT enabled so is that good.
    I have read the FAQs, Beginner's guide, Installation Guide, Dual Boot wiki entry but I just don't understand the above concepts. But it looks this this is the main thing in dual booting. Almost everything else is doable but this I have to get right on account of what happened the last time I installed Arch without getting the above right.
    Last edited by Some Arch Lovin (2014-06-14 08:53:14)

    A few issues with the dual boot setup
    Hello again, I lost my dual factor authentication grid from lastpass. Opensuse was acutally overwriting new pdf files over my old pdf files so now that grid pdf is actually an Arch cheat cheet with the name last_pass_grid.pdf. And the gmail account I used to register to Arch forums is also in last pass.
    This is why I created another account. I am some arch lovin.
    The installation went smoothly but I could not dual boot Windows7 with Arch because my Win7 image is not UEFI bootable so had to dual boot win8(not a fan at all) and arch.
    Almost everything is working correctly. I have a few issues that aren't affecting how the system is working but they still need sorting out.
    I'll do them one at a time but I want to know from the admins if I should start a new thread? Because in a way this thread accomplished it job i.e. win7 and arch dual booting in uefi system.
    If the answer is yes I should create a new thread depending upon the issue then I will do that but in case its a no since I have only 2-3 problems I am going to ask help for the first one.
    My gummiboot is not working on startup. I have to press f12 and use bios booting menu to boot. The problem with that is if I put Windows at the top of the boot priority the bios does not show F12 and F2 at the time of booting up so I can't access the boot menu. I have to boot into Windows and crash it by holding the power button and then the F12 options shows up and I am able to boot into Arch. If I put Arch at the top then Windows keeps restoring back to an earlier version due to start up options.
    NOTE : I can't be sure but one it did work(only once). I checked the images online to compare with what I saw and its very similar. An all black screen with three bootloading options
    Windows
    Arch
    Opensuse(don't know why I created a completely new GPT partition table)
    This is what I did while installing Gummiboot
    # mount -t efivarfs efivarfs /sys/firmware/efi/efivars
    # pacman -S gummiboot
    # gummiboot install
    I tried going through the gummiboot to see if I can do something but it very difficult to comprehend as a beginner. All I get is the characters gummiboot understands but thats all.
    Last edited by Archer61 (2014-06-11 13:48:56)

  • Dual boot – Win XP / Win 7 – activation problems

    Here's the scene:
    1/ Have Xp installed and CS4 running fine... (used to have CS3 as well but there was a mobo problem and CS3 now gives an activation error message. Too much of a hassle to reformat and reinstall... yada, yada, yada.)
    2/ Just installed Win 7 to test as a dual boot option and installed CS4 fresh. PS and AI both give me a "Licensing for the product has expired" message with no options. There are no other activations, meaning no alternative on another system or laptop, etc.
    Is there a work around or do i have to do a completely fresh install? Meaning, deactivate CS4 in th XP boot and then reinstall CS4 in th Win 7 boot?
    TIA...
    Kz

    Here is the answer without having to join the site where the answer lies. The stuff that was removed by me were things that I felt were inappropriate for an Adobe Forum. They do not affect the ability to perform the fix:
    So you installed Adobe Creative Suite  Master Collection or any of its other applications, and now  you can’t even open up any of these programs. You’re probably receiving the now  semi-infamous “Licensing for this product has  expired” pop up error.
    This error  will more than likely affect the use of the following programs:
    Adobe InDesign CS4
    Adobe  Photoshop CS4 Extended
    Adobe Illustrator CS4
    Adobe Flash CS4 Professional
    Adobe  Dreamweaver CS4
    Adobe Fireworks CS4
    Adobe Contribute CS4
    Adobe After Effects CS4 
    Adobe Premiere Pro CS4
    Adobe Soundbooth  CS4
    Adobe OnLocation CS4
    Adobe Encore  CS4
    Don’t worry, because some guys over  at who knows where got the fix that will save you many hours of headaches. The  problem lies within the “amtlib.dll” file in each of the CS4 application  directories. However, downloading a simple fix and updating each of the files  with a newer one can solve this problem.
    Step 1:
    Download this file it includes both  amtlib.dll files the second file(64bit) is only  to be added to photoshop (64bit)  folder the rest use the regular amtlib.dll file:If you download this file skip to step 3 !
    Code:
    http://www.megaupload.com/?d=WZKC1K7Q
    other  files for step 2 using the " removed by si conehead ".
    Personally i like doing in manually its only like 17 files you  need to change:
    Code:
    removed by si conehead
    Step 2:
    Run the (removed by si conehead)  and allow for the file to be copied  over to all the directories. This should fix all your problems.
    If the above two steps didn’t work, try the  following:
    Step 3:
    Search for:  “amtlib.dll” in the Adobe folder C:\Program Files\Adobe\.
    Step 4:
    Replace all the “amtlib.dll” files in  each of the Adobe folders with the file in the downloaded fix.
    ONLY
    do the following steps if the previous steps  didn’t work for you.
    Step 5:
    Go to  C:\Windows\System32\drivers\etc, open the “hosts” file there with Notepad.
    Step 6:
    Add the following  lines at the end of the file:
    127.0.0.1  localhost
    127.0.0.1 activate.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1 practivate.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1  ereg.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1 activate.wip3.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1 wip3.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1  3dns-3.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1 3dns-2.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1 adobe-dns.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1  adobe-dns-2.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1 adobe-dns-3.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1 ereg.wip3.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1  activate-sea.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1  wwis-dubc1-vip60.adobe.com
    127.0.0.1  activate-sjc0.adobe.com
    ::1 localhost
    Step 7:
    Go to C:\Program Files\Common  Files\Adobe\Adobe PCD\cache
    and delete the file “cache.DB” 
    Step 8:
    Enter a new  serial number for the applications and open up any Adobe Creative Suite  program.
    Now everything should be working fine. 

  • 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 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

  • 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.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Returning my Damage Tablet

    hey guys, wats up i want some information on the procedures and policy with returning or exchanging a tablet the has a active warrenty. the damage to the table was actually caused by the user would that affect the process of returning  

  • How can i set a layout for MIGO screen

    Hello all, How can i set a layout for MIGO screen. & make that layout default. Like i want to drag Requistioner column next to quantity in MIgo screen. temporarily I can drag but is there a way to save as layout & save it.

  • Sending Cheque as PDF attachment in Mail using F110.

    Hi all, We have a requirement to send the cheque as as PDF attachment in Mail while printing it through transaction F110.Mail has to be triggered when the payment run is done through F110.Is there any config setting to do this without doing any chang

  • How to write the code to insert into attendance table

    Hi, I have a report class lov (through which all the classes will be selected). once any class seleted from the list it will display all the students in the class my query in the report was SELECT FIRST_NAME || ' ' || SURNAME "Pupil_Name", er.pupil_n

  • ERROR INSTALLING JINITIATOR 1.3.1.22 ON WINDOWS 98

    We are Migrating from iAS 9.0.4 to 10.1.2.0.2, consequently I also have to migrate the JInitiator on the client side. When I install JInitiator 1.3.1.22 on Windows 98, it Fails, I get this error : Error number 0x80070725 Description : incompatible ve