install Linux on Windows 10 | Install Ubuntu on Windows 10 using Virtualbox ?
Has anybody installed Linux on Windows 10 using Virtualbox? and since my old PC will have support after oct 25 and won't update to 11 , i just want to use win 10 for Music notation program and use Progdvb iptv player .
Hi ivtec - I've installed various Linux flavors on Win 7/10/11 using both VirtualBox and VMWare. It's been a couple of years since I used VirtualBox but I can definitively say I didn't have any issues that prevented me from using it for about 6-7 years. If you have any specific questions about the install, let me know and I will try to assist!
Also, not sure if you're aware but VMWare decided that they're going to release VMWare Workstation and Fusion free for personal use. I've used Workstation for about 10 years, so I find it more "friendly" than Virtualbox, mostly because I'm so used to it :-)
Hi ivtec - I've installed various Linux flavors on Win 7/10/11 using both VirtualBox and VMWare. It's been a couple of years since I used VirtualBox but I can definitively say I didn't have any issues that prevented me from using it for about 6-7 years. If you have any specific questions about the install, let me know and I will try to assist!
Also, not sure if you're aware but VMWare decided that they're going to release VMWare Workstation and Fusion free for personal use. I've used Workstation for about 10 years, so I find it more "friendly" than Virtualbox, mostly because I'm so used to it :-)
Video is a very good walkthrough of the install and config process!
Consider that the video is 4 years old so there might be minor differences in the look and feel of the Virtualbox interface. But otherwise, his steps are spot on.
Some things to look out for:
Virtual machines can suck up all your storage space. I'd recommend using a secondary drive so you can go wild without it affecting your main drive.
If you have lots of memory and a good processor, give the VM as much memory and CPUs as you can spare without it bogging down Windows. And you can always adjust this later without it breaking anything.
Yeah that was a very good video and now you got me interested in going down this rabbit hole again giving this more consideration again because I have several times considered learning this operating system but it looks simpler than what I remember it back a few years ago when I was considering doing then
why not dual boot ? if you did that you can run a full on virus scan when booted into linux like i did many years ago and it said windows was a virus so i deleted it and never looked back . think we were on xp then . i do however think windows is fine so long as it never connects to the internet .
as for emulators i have never had a high enough spec pc to run it satisfactory .
Dual boot is an option, so is having a separate drive and you can just use the BIOS boot function key to select which one you want to boot into. The difference is in the fact that when you're "playing around" with operating systems, a virtual environment is much more flexible. You can adjust VM memory and disk size, add and remove network interfaces, add additional drives and other customizations. And if it gets messed up you can restore a backup or create a new one without affecting your main OS.
The downside is you are sharing memory and CPU with the virtual machine(s). Hence why you need a good amount of RAM and CPU juice to share and not have the laptop slow down.
My biggest use case back then was in having test environments within my laptop that I could use at any time without having to leave my main system. For example,
Windows XP and Win 7 VMs so I could run legacy Win applications.
Windows 10 and 11 VMs to test applications without screwing up my main machine.
A Linux VM with a variety of network tools and other apps.
A MacOS VM, because why not? Was fun telling people I run MacOS on my Windows 10 laptop.😁
Video is a very good walkthrough of the install and config process!
Consider that the video is 4 years old so there might be minor differences in the look and feel of the Virtualbox interface. But otherwise, his steps are spot on.
Some things to look out for:
Virtual machines can suck up all your storage space. I'd recommend using a secondary drive so you can go wild without it affecting your main drive.
If you have lots of memory and a good processor, give the VM as much memory and CPUs as you can spare without it bogging down Windows. And you can always adjust this later without it breaking anything.
Have fun!
Thanks guys ; You mention that i should use a second HDD and that would be my first option ,but how i connect a second drive ,Do you see in my motherboard output to connect another motherboard Lenovo M-92P 3.20Ghz I5 2400 ,8GB Ram sandy bridge ; https://www.ebay.com/itm/26634731395...faultOrganicWe Maybe this video will help me despite not be same model.;https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cJDTn7nJmHc
Using a dual boot computer sometimes is a bad headache because you take a chance that your hard drive will be screwed up and then you have to start all over again I used to use a program called partition magic it was a decent program and I had used it for several years until one day I could not get into either partition I had to reformat the hard disk and start all over again and a few months later the same thing happened again and I was over it and did not use it again
And as far as using a virtual machine I personally think unless you have a decent computer that has plenty of memory and hard drive space you are going to be limited to possibly slow performance and not a stable operating system environment and might be more trouble than what its worth
Using a dual boot computer sometimes is a bad headache because you take a chance that your hard drive will be screwed up and then you have to start all over again I used to use a program called partition magic it was a decent program and I had used it for several years until one day I could not get into either partition I had to reformat the hard disk and start all over again and a few months later the same thing happened again and I was over it and did not use it again
And as far as using a virtual machine I personally think unless you have a decent computer that has plenty of memory and hard drive space you are going to be limited to possibly slow performance and not a stable operating system environment and might be more trouble than what its worth
Thanks mate; what you think is best to use the Ubuntu boot manager or Win boot manager ? if that's possible on Win 10?, one time long time ago when i used Linux and winxp i did that,but now with Win 10 ,i don't know .I only will think of it when Win 10 starts to give issues , maybe at that time will use other option since i have 3 more lenovos same modules sandy bridge , i will install Linux in one of them since i have a VGA splitter and put them side by side and will solve my issue of going through all this trouble .
Thanks mate .Yes i see ,what about the power supply maybe i share cable from the DVD?
Yeah, should be OK to split the power rail. But I would suggest first checking the power supply label to make sure it can handle it. Mini PCs are not exactly known to have "beefy" power supplies.
You can do it either with an original cable, or just use a SATA power splitter.
Hi folks ;I did finely made a decision on how to go about the OPS on my Lenovo M91 Small case. I kept Win 10 on one HDD and installed Linux Ubuntu on another small laptop HDD used DVD power and Sata connection and attached it to the another HDD and it fits perfectly ,then installed Grub boot manager and now i can boot either one . I find 24.04.2 LTS to be very good and i do almost everything i do
Cpu i7-7700hq Ram - 8gb samsung, 32 gb sk hynix
Gpu - nvidia geforce 1050ti
Ssd orion o700
Hdd hgst721010A9e630
See images
What's not working right?
The system does not even POST, display is black,
LEDs on - power led, aiplane mode, capslock fpr few seconds in the start(when connected to ac power) only.
When did the problem happen?
My laptop had dual boot setup, ubuntu and windows 10.
It already had a moklist error, that would occur when i tried to boot ubuntu. ...
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My Surface Pro 3 currently runs on Ubuntu 22.04, with Secure Boot enabled and Boot From SSD Only.
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I hereby request a copy of Intel Flash Programming Tool for Linux x64.
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i have tried:
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