F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems The installation generated two additional partitions.

The installation generated two additional partitions.

The installation generated two additional partitions.

S
super_kuzma
Member
146
01-04-2016, 07:48 PM
#1
Hi there, your setup sounds a bit unusual but not uncommon. After installing Xubuntu on an SSD with SATA PM OCZ-VERTEX2, the system often creates additional partitions to accommodate the installation files. It’s normal for the OS to generate these separate partitions, especially if you’re using a different drive type or partitioning strategy. Since your installation doesn’t boot directly from the SSD, it likely boots from one of the newly created partitions (like Ubuntu). Just make sure the correct partition is selected during boot. Let me know if you need more details!
S
super_kuzma
01-04-2016, 07:48 PM #1

Hi there, your setup sounds a bit unusual but not uncommon. After installing Xubuntu on an SSD with SATA PM OCZ-VERTEX2, the system often creates additional partitions to accommodate the installation files. It’s normal for the OS to generate these separate partitions, especially if you’re using a different drive type or partitioning strategy. Since your installation doesn’t boot directly from the SSD, it likely boots from one of the newly created partitions (like Ubuntu). Just make sure the correct partition is selected during boot. Let me know if you need more details!

K
killers_harry
Member
122
01-04-2016, 08:41 PM
#2
I believe only your bios seem to treat them alike, but they’re actually different. You can inspect how the partitions appear on the SSD using Windows. If one partition is extremely small or shows a single OS file while another contains additional data, it’s definitely a sign. Probably just lookup tables and extra files to launch Ubuntu.
K
killers_harry
01-04-2016, 08:41 PM #2

I believe only your bios seem to treat them alike, but they’re actually different. You can inspect how the partitions appear on the SSD using Windows. If one partition is extremely small or shows a single OS file while another contains additional data, it’s definitely a sign. Probably just lookup tables and extra files to launch Ubuntu.

S
superplunge
Junior Member
11
01-11-2016, 10:07 PM
#3
They likely aren't showing partitions but bootable devices. Your motherboard probably includes a built-in boot manager—usually you can only choose drives from its menu, not install an OS directly. It might display Ubuntu on P0 (partition 0) and also recognize the recovery option. You can try identifying which is which, but if it works, you can stick with the first choice. To see the actual partitions, use a partition manager inside Ubuntu or Windows.
S
superplunge
01-11-2016, 10:07 PM #3

They likely aren't showing partitions but bootable devices. Your motherboard probably includes a built-in boot manager—usually you can only choose drives from its menu, not install an OS directly. It might display Ubuntu on P0 (partition 0) and also recognize the recovery option. You can try identifying which is which, but if it works, you can stick with the first choice. To see the actual partitions, use a partition manager inside Ubuntu or Windows.

F
flyer78
Senior Member
425
01-13-2016, 04:23 PM
#4
Yes, it’s typical for Ubuntu to behave differently from Windows during installation. You might notice variations in steps or timing since the processes are handled uniquely by each OS.
F
flyer78
01-13-2016, 04:23 PM #4

Yes, it’s typical for Ubuntu to behave differently from Windows during installation. You might notice variations in steps or timing since the processes are handled uniquely by each OS.

A
apilot0404
Member
178
01-14-2016, 09:16 PM
#5
It's unclear why it appears this way—it might be a characteristic of the motherboard, and it doesn’t seem to be a major concern. If you're using Linux, it would have indicated an issue, which wouldn't happen otherwise.
A
apilot0404
01-14-2016, 09:16 PM #5

It's unclear why it appears this way—it might be a characteristic of the motherboard, and it doesn’t seem to be a major concern. If you're using Linux, it would have indicated an issue, which wouldn't happen otherwise.