LINUX LITE 7.2 FINAL RELEASED - SEE RELEASE ANNOUNCEMENTS SECTION FOR DETAILS


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Dual booting with windows 10
#11
O.K, sounds like you may have done it.?
Just to be sure.?

When you power on, do you you get a choice for:
Selecting Windows or Linux..??
Then if you select Linux you get the blue screen

or when you power on is it going straight to this blue screen..??
Upgrades WIP 2.6 to 2.8 - (6 X 2.6 to 2.8 completed on: 20/02/16 All O.K )
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks Smile

Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) ,  BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)
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#12
(10-05-2015, 10:06 AM)Wirezfree link Wrote: O.K, sounds like you may have done it.?
Just to be sure.?

When you power on, do you you get a choice for:
Selecting Windows or Linux..??
Then if you select Linux you get the blue screen

or when you power on is it going straight to this blue screen..??

When i power in the laptop i first get a screen were i can choose between windows and linux lite and after i select linux lite i get the blue screen and need to select the top choice to boot into linux.
Life on earth is expensive but it does include a free trip around the sun.
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#13
Sounds like you have the Windows boot manager as your chooser as per Matthew Moore's tutorial.  Then you get the blue grub.  Whether Linux Lite boots to the gray screen with the feather or to the blue grub and then to the words Linux Lite with dots underneath, varies according to your graphics card.  This is normal behavior.  If you didn't select Linux Lite at the blue screen, it would count down a few seconds and select that automatically.
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#14
Yes,
It sounds like you have done it...
The time(countdown) on the grub screen can be changed...
But that involves editing grub file..
Upgrades WIP 2.6 to 2.8 - (6 X 2.6 to 2.8 completed on: 20/02/16 All O.K )
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks Smile

Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) ,  BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)
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#15
Glad you're up and running.  I dual booted using the "Install Alongside Windows" option for a short while.  In my opinion, virtualization is better.  No need to shut down just to get to Windows for a task and then rebooting into Linux Lite.  That was the pits.

In the Tutorials section of this forum, there is a thread on Virtualbox.  When you're ready to jettison dual booting, look into that (https://www.freecinema2022.gq/forums/tutor...irtualbox/) and into the link Wirezfree mentioned to image your Windows build. 
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#16
well, it was fun while it lasted. After rebooting from linux to windows and then back to linux i cant boot into linux anynore. EasyBCD also doesnt work anymore..did before but now it just doesnt open. So now looking in how to get back into linux. I will have a look into virtualisation, but not sure it will work here..didnt work before.

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#17
Then I fall back to my other advice.  The bandages we're putting on what you have so far are just that.  I really would backup the Windows data, get rid of the Windows boot, install a fresh copy of Linux Lite to the hard drive, and have Windows as a VM.  This assumes you have, or can acquire, the media for the programs you'll be using in Windows.  And, of course, that you have the activation key, or can acquire it in the first 30 days, for the Windows VM you'll need to create.

If we weren't seven hours apart, I'd volunteer to create a remote session to help you with that.  If you can wait until Thursday, I'll have more flexibility to do that.  Otherwise, if you'll be up after midnight your time, I can carve out a couple of hours to help you get started today.

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#18
What i find strange is that easybcd isnt working anymore. It just doesnt start, i only got as far as it letting me choose the language and then notting. I only need to be sure that i can hook up phone and tablet to the laptop and have them detected in the virtual machine so i can use the windows os for repairing/flashing etc

I used showkeyplus to give me the windows key, did have a oem windows 7 installation before on laptop and use that along with the key to upgrade to windows 10.
Life on earth is expensive but it does include a free trip around the sun.
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#19
Gotcha.  If you have an Android phone or tablet, you should be good on hooking them up to Linux Lite.  You're not alone in that.  There are recent threads in this forum on people connecting their phone and tablet devices to Linux Lite.  I have done so myself.  If there's a particular repair/flash program that's Windows specific, you will be able to connect to your devices via a Windows virtual machine.

I'm not sure on the connectivity between IOS phones or tablets and Linux Lite, but you will still be able to connect to them via a USB connection to your Windows guest operating system.

My personal experience with my Windows 7 virtual machine upgrading to Windows 10 wasn't good.  It wasn't as lightweight as Window 7 alone.  In fact it was much slower.  This was in both Virtualbox and VMware Player for Linux.  Your mileage may vary.  I cloned my Windows 7 VM and I created a snapshot before the Windows 10 upgrade.  I reverted to Windows 7 early on because of the performance I was getting out of the Windows 10 upgrade.  Windows 7 is supported until April 2020, by the way.  By then I might not need Windows at all, or I'll just buy a Windows 10 license to do a clean Windows 10 install to a VM.

Now on getting you out of your bind, I say boot to the Linux Lite Live CD, access the "Users" directory of your Windows install (using the Linux Lite file manager), and copy everything in that directory to an external hard drive.  That will backup all of your data.  Then install a fresh copy of LL 2.6, wiping out all of the Windows partitions.  I would recommend creating a separate home partition.  How to do that is included below.  After that, then we can get a Windows VM going.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_3WsX1OjqSE
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#20
Just to add to the good advice from @torreydale ,,

I now create a separate /vbox partition, keep the VM's seperate.
That way you have more control over backups, backup just /home or just /vbox or both.
I find it helps keep backups tidy, smaller and quicker

One of the main things with Virtualbox that gets forgotten, are the extras that are needed
- virtualbox extension pack, this is in the virtualbox application itself
- virtualbox guest additions, this is added into the guest

Plenty of help available when you get to do this
Upgrades WIP 2.6 to 2.8 - (6 X 2.6 to 2.8 completed on: 20/02/16 All O.K )
Linux Lite 3.0 Humming on a ASRock N3070 Mobo ~ btrfs RAID 10 Install on 4 Disks Smile

Computers Early days:
ZX Spectrum(1982) , HP-150 MS-DOS(1983) , Amstrad CPC464(1984) ,  BBC Micro B+64(1985) , My First PC HP-Vectra(1987)
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