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17759 Posts in 672 Topics- by 302 Members - Latest Member: boriencurne
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Author Topic: Linux is a bitch.  (Read 445 times)
Deusstyles
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« on: December 24, 2011, 06:25:04 PM »

There's no real question here, just thought I'd let everyone know my story. So I decided to install Linux as a second OS on a laptop I just bought, so I made a new logical drive on the HDD. Well it was the fifth logical drive(because for some reason Lenovo decided to have four from the start) and me not thing about about it totally FUBAR'd the MBR. Long story short, one repartition and a network install of Slackware later I still can't get wireless to work. *sigh* I'm almost ready to give up and just install windows 7 back on the damn thing, but I really wanted it to work.  Cry
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Zathu
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« Reply #1 on: December 26, 2011, 12:00:53 PM »

I think the best way to get a dual boot going for playing around is installing Ubuntu via Wubi. It installs from Windows into a virtual drive image stored as a file in the Windows partition and drops a boot option in the Windows boot menu. Uninstalls through Add/Remove Programs.

But for something more exotic like slackware, having a second drive is a winner.
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Teo McDohl
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« Reply #2 on: December 26, 2011, 04:42:34 PM »

Yeah, I'll never install Linux on the same HDD as Windows ever again.  With the way Ubuntu wants the boot loader, the chances for Windows to fry seem too much for me. 
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Deusstyles
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« Reply #3 on: December 26, 2011, 06:54:51 PM »

Yeah, I've noticed Grub does that a lot. Lilo seems a bit more sable and more secure which is fun times.

I went with Slackware because it's exotic. I wanted something that forced my to learn more about the OS. Package manager like apt-get, yum, and YaST make it it all too easy to not have to figure out the dependencies and such. Also Vim still scares the ever living hell out of me, another thing I really need to learn.

I've been playing around with Ubuntu, Fedora, Cent, Slackware, OpenSUSE and Backtrack on USB drives, live CDs, VMs, and the Wubi thing a few times. But until it's the only option for the computer I generally just fall back to windows and sort of forget about them. My goal is to get this configured the way I want then try a LFS(Linux From Scratch) install. That's going to be the painful one.
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