Before you get started, make sure you've backed up your computer. Although the dual-boot setup process is not very involved, accidents can still happen. So take the time to back up your important files in case chaos theory comes into play. In addition to backing up your files, consider taking an image backup of the disk as well, though that's not required and can be a more advanced process.

I recommend installing Windows and Ubuntu via flash drives since they're faster than DVDs. It probably goes without saying, but creating bootable media erases everything on the flash drive. Therefore, make sure the flash drives are empty or contain data you don't care about losing.


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If your machine doesn't support booting from USB, you can create DVD media instead. Unfortunately, because no two computers seem to have the same DVD-burning software, I can't walk you through that process. However, if your DVD-burning application has an option to burn from an ISO image, that's the option you need.

Download and launch the Windows 10 Media Creation Tool. Once you launch the tool, it will walk you through the steps required to create the Windows media on a USB or DVD-R. Note: Even if you already have Windows 10 installed, it's a good idea to create bootable media anyway, just in case something goes wrong and you need to reinstall it.

For creating bootable media for any Linux distribution, I recommend Etcher. Etcher works on all three major operating systems (Linux, MacOS, and Windows) and is careful not to let you overwrite your current operating system partition.

Insert the Windows installation media you created into your computer and boot from it. How you do this depends on your computer, but most have a key you can press to initiate the boot menu. On a Dell PC for example, that key is F12. If the flash drive doesn't show up as an option, you may need to restart the computer. Sometimes it will show up only if you've inserted the media before turning on the computer. If you see a message like, "press any key to boot from the installation media," press a key. You should see the following screen. Select your language and keyboard style and click Next.

Whether it was already there or you worked through the steps above, at this point you have Windows installed. Now use the Ubuntu installation media you created earlier to boot into Ubuntu. Insert the media and boot your computer from it. Again, the exact sequence of keys to access the boot menu varies from one computer to another, so check your documentation if you're not sure. If all goes well, you see the following screen once the media finishes loading:

I used to have at least one dual-boot machine at all times. The biggest downside is when you need some file from the other system. If you didn't think to save it to some removable media, you have to reboot, then reboot again.

With a virtual machine, you can have both systems running at the same time, and use an ssh/sftp client to transfer files from one to the other. The tricky part is apportioning resources to your machine -- disk space is not so hard, but how much memory, how much of your processor(s) to spare; I can't say that I feel like I've figured that out completely. I don't know if it's a feature of the VM or not, but I find that Windows 10 seems to be constantly churning my processors, even when no program is running. It seemed better with Windows 7.

Hello;

If you have your windows data on a disk, then when when booting into Linux, simply mount that disk from Linux to access the data. Linux can mount NTFS drives and can read/write to NTFS disks. I do this all the time. When done with Linux, reboot to windows, and your updated data will be there on that disk.

If you install Ubuntu or any other linux first and then install windows then you may need to install grub again or windows installation will make windows' bootloader as default bootloader and that will directly boot to windows without asking.

What if you machine initially came with Windows 8 installed and you upgraded to windows 10, but now I want to install Ubuntu and run Windows under a VM. How do I get the Windows 10 product key for the install?

this would be great but what if linux(any version and brand) spits pci errors, cpu locks and wound boot and if you do a linux network install it goes well but at boot time the same issues, is there a solution for?

I had windows 10 genuine and I installed Ubuntu 18.04 alongside windows. All the setup has gone good. After I restart my pc I can't able to access ubuntu ie I can't find the boot menu which which is I have to start. It is by default windows 10 is getting turned on. What should I do to access ubuntu? Hi

I am looking in to buying a new laptop and will need to dual boot Windows and Ubuntu. I am planning three SSD's - one for Windows, one for Ubuntu and one as a shared data drive.


Is it possible to set up DB so that both operating systems can sync to the shared data drive? I have done a bit of research on here and I cannot seem to find a definitive answer.

I am not really wanting to run DB on a server. I want to dual boot a single machine which will have both Windows and Ubuntu on it. It will have Windows installed on one drive, Ubuntu on another and a third drive will be a data drive that can be seen by both operating systems that I plan to put my DB folder. All drives will be installed on one computer and the only user account accessing that drive will be me.

I attempted this today, I think this thread is outdated. It looks like the dropbox desktop client for Linux no longer supports ntfs formatted volumes (requires ext4 formatted partition). Thus, it seems now impossible to boot between linux and windows and share dropbox files between them (Windows can not read ext4 formatted partition) - you must have two different dropbox installations - this is from the system requirements page on dropbox:

So I have a question though. Does anyone know, if I'm booted in Linux, I can see and mount the ntfs drive - so I can open and modify files in the ntfs mounted drive within the dropbox folders for the Windows install. If I modify those files, next time I boot into Windows and the dropbox client runs - will it see the files have changed and synch them?

I am not a tech newbie but not a tech savvy too. I need to set up Windows 11 Pro for test purpose on my Windows 11 Home PC. I already connected a separate SSD to the motherboard. How can I dual boot two Windows 11 instances on two different SSDs on my PC?

@Henrycos Dual booting two Windows 11 instances on two separate SSDs is possible, but it can be quite complex. The easiest way to do this is to use a third-party software such as Acronis Disk Director or Paragon Hard Disk Manager. These programs will allow you to create a dual-boot configuration and manage the two separate instances of Windows 11. They will also allow you to install the Windows 11 Pro version on the second SSD and configure it with the appropriate drivers and settings.

If you don't have a third-party software to manage the dual-boot configuration, you can use UUBYTE ISO Editor to create a bootable USB drive with both Windows 11 Home and Pro versions. This program allows you to easily create a bootable USB drive with both versions of Windows 11. Once you have created the drive, you can then boot up your PC and select which version of Windows you want to run.

This usually means hitting one of Delete, F2, F10 or F11 when your device is turning on (it varies by device), then moving the storage device to the top of the boot priority list. Learn more in our separate article on how to boot from USB.

When setting up a PC to boot more than one operating system, you may sometimes lose the ability to boot into one of the operating systems. The BCDBoot option allows you to quickly add boot options for a Windows-based operating system.

When the process is done, you can close the Computer Management window. Now, insert the USB stick with your Windows 11 installation. Reboot your PC and press the necessary key to access your boot menu. From your computer's internal Boot Manager menu, choose the USB drive that has the Windows 11 installation to boot from that drive.

If you don't like this, you can easily change your default OS and other boot options. From the boot menu, click the Change defaults or choose other options link to change a few things about the boot menu.

Should you ever wish to remove the dual boot environment and get rid of one of the versions of Windows, you can do this by booting into the version that you want to keep and deleting the partition for the other OS from the Disk Management tool.

Forth option and probably the least satisfactory, install windows, saving a good part of the hardrive for another OS, THEN install a FreePBX distribution that can handle custom partitioning and depending on your window choice EFI booting (or turn of EFI boot options in the NUC bios), you can then choose one or the other just like the good old days of dual-booting.

I booted up on the Arch Linux bootable USB drive and installed to the 500GB SSD drive. I used archinstall 2.5.3 to install Arch Linux. No errors or problems when installing to the 500GB SSD. Boot loader is systemd. 2351a5e196

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