F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Share your gaming or work PC while keeping the operating system and drives separate.

Share your gaming or work PC while keeping the operating system and drives separate.

Share your gaming or work PC while keeping the operating system and drives separate.

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Warigan
Junior Member
49
09-01-2016, 04:02 PM
#1
I'm working through my reasoning to justify upgrading my setup. My current laptop is an i5 with 8GB RAM, but it struggles under load—especially during video calls and when running design apps and screen sharing at once. The USB 3.0 dock adds complexity since I use two external monitors, which increased CPU usage via DisplayLink. I currently have two separate laptops: one for gaming and one for work, and I don’t share them. My son uses the gaming machine, so I want to keep work files secure. With a new dual-purpose machine, I’m considering adding two M.2 SSDs—one for gaming, one for work—each with its own Windows installation. I need guidance on how to configure OS settings and boot options so that: 1) I’m asked to pick the boot device each time it starts, and 2) the SSDs don’t interfere with each other. If I were using regular SATA drives, I could install power switches on a front panel, but that’s not possible with M.2 drives. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
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Warigan
09-01-2016, 04:02 PM #1

I'm working through my reasoning to justify upgrading my setup. My current laptop is an i5 with 8GB RAM, but it struggles under load—especially during video calls and when running design apps and screen sharing at once. The USB 3.0 dock adds complexity since I use two external monitors, which increased CPU usage via DisplayLink. I currently have two separate laptops: one for gaming and one for work, and I don’t share them. My son uses the gaming machine, so I want to keep work files secure. With a new dual-purpose machine, I’m considering adding two M.2 SSDs—one for gaming, one for work—each with its own Windows installation. I need guidance on how to configure OS settings and boot options so that: 1) I’m asked to pick the boot device each time it starts, and 2) the SSDs don’t interfere with each other. If I were using regular SATA drives, I could install power switches on a front panel, but that’s not possible with M.2 drives. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated.

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Agrius545
Member
67
09-02-2016, 12:26 AM
#2
I’ve tried something similar before with dual booting Ubuntu and Windows 10. When I power on the laptop, I see a choice between Ubuntu or Windows Boot Manager. The slowest method was adjusting the BIOS every time, which was frustrating. I came across an article suggesting installing two different Windows 10 versions on the same drive. I’m not sure it would work with multiple drives, but it seems possible. You’d normally install the first OS as usual, then add the second OS to another partition and get a boot menu that should appear as described. The article I found is here: https://www.howtogeek.com/214477/how-to-...f-windows/
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Agrius545
09-02-2016, 12:26 AM #2

I’ve tried something similar before with dual booting Ubuntu and Windows 10. When I power on the laptop, I see a choice between Ubuntu or Windows Boot Manager. The slowest method was adjusting the BIOS every time, which was frustrating. I came across an article suggesting installing two different Windows 10 versions on the same drive. I’m not sure it would work with multiple drives, but it seems possible. You’d normally install the first OS as usual, then add the second OS to another partition and get a boot menu that should appear as described. The article I found is here: https://www.howtogeek.com/214477/how-to-...f-windows/

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gui1go
Member
177
09-04-2016, 10:28 AM
#3
It seems you're uncertain about not being able to see the other drive.
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gui1go
09-04-2016, 10:28 AM #3

It seems you're uncertain about not being able to see the other drive.

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GnomesPoilus
Junior Member
1
09-04-2016, 11:57 AM
#4
I’m beginning to consider a middle ground. Perhaps store work files on an external hard drive, though it won’t match the security of keeping both Windows versions isolated.
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GnomesPoilus
09-04-2016, 11:57 AM #4

I’m beginning to consider a middle ground. Perhaps store work files on an external hard drive, though it won’t match the security of keeping both Windows versions isolated.

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TheDeath_Pro
Member
128
09-04-2016, 01:57 PM
#5
I would set up two users or use two distinct laptops.
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TheDeath_Pro
09-04-2016, 01:57 PM #5

I would set up two users or use two distinct laptops.

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jjgrow12
Junior Member
46
09-11-2016, 05:48 AM
#6
Security is limited when only one user is present. I also can't afford two different computers; I'll be using one desktop later.
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jjgrow12
09-11-2016, 05:48 AM #6

Security is limited when only one user is present. I also can't afford two different computers; I'll be using one desktop later.

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jaythered
Member
71
09-18-2016, 01:31 AM
#7
Wouldn't a work computer be included in the workplace setup? If you're independent or a freelancer, I'd expect it to be bought separately for tax and bookkeeping reasons.
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jaythered
09-18-2016, 01:31 AM #7

Wouldn't a work computer be included in the workplace setup? If you're independent or a freelancer, I'd expect it to be bought separately for tax and bookkeeping reasons.

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tomer1122
Member
53
09-18-2016, 06:07 AM
#8
Work provided a laptop, though it runs slowly sometimes while I run design programs and screen share during video calls. Work will help fund the project, but won’t cover the entire cost since it’ll be handling both work and personal tasks. From a tax perspective, in Australia I can claim the percentage of usage for work expenses.
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tomer1122
09-18-2016, 06:07 AM #8

Work provided a laptop, though it runs slowly sometimes while I run design programs and screen share during video calls. Work will help fund the project, but won’t cover the entire cost since it’ll be handling both work and personal tasks. From a tax perspective, in Australia I can claim the percentage of usage for work expenses.

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djepinio
Member
67
09-18-2016, 10:00 AM
#9
This process in Australia isn't clear, but in the US, using a company computer for personal tasks means the employer owns it.
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djepinio
09-18-2016, 10:00 AM #9

This process in Australia isn't clear, but in the US, using a company computer for personal tasks means the employer owns it.