F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Various platforms, single machine, no virtual environment needed.

Various platforms, single machine, no virtual environment needed.

Various platforms, single machine, no virtual environment needed.

Pages (3): Previous 1 2 3
C
164
04-17-2025, 05:24 AM
#21
He already has Linux set up – likely he doesn’t need to waste time on this (and probably doesn’t have to).
C
CROSSBOWWEAPON
04-17-2025, 05:24 AM #21

He already has Linux set up – likely he doesn’t need to waste time on this (and probably doesn’t have to).

D
D4rKSlayer95
Member
229
04-17-2025, 01:24 PM
#22
Win10 insider builds come pre-activated as a free gift from Microsoft, though I’m not sure about upgrading via a DBoot setup—install Windows first, then switch to Linux. Ezpz dualboot is the recommended approach.
D
D4rKSlayer95
04-17-2025, 01:24 PM #22

Win10 insider builds come pre-activated as a free gift from Microsoft, though I’m not sure about upgrading via a DBoot setup—install Windows first, then switch to Linux. Ezpz dualboot is the recommended approach.

R
RevengeLP
Member
59
04-18-2025, 11:35 PM
#23
Adjust the size of your Linux disk. Set up Windows installation. Undo the process by rebuilding GRUB from a Linux USB drive.
R
RevengeLP
04-18-2025, 11:35 PM #23

Adjust the size of your Linux disk. Set up Windows installation. Undo the process by rebuilding GRUB from a Linux USB drive.

T
53
04-19-2025, 03:43 AM
#24
Indeed, I already linked him a how-to guide (actually, several, since my first post way above had a different, older guide for Vista). Blowing away the entire HDD and installing Windows first is likely easier, but I don't know how committed the OP is to his existing Linux install.
T
thedoggamer987
04-19-2025, 03:43 AM #24

Indeed, I already linked him a how-to guide (actually, several, since my first post way above had a different, older guide for Vista). Blowing away the entire HDD and installing Windows first is likely easier, but I don't know how committed the OP is to his existing Linux install.

Y
YoungAriesArt
Member
192
04-19-2025, 04:02 AM
#25
The issue seems to be with the hparted utility in Linux Mint. It appears you can't modify the size of your main partition because it's fully occupied by other partitions. Since you're using it for running Linux Mint, you might need more free space elsewhere. Placing the Windows ISO on a USB drive won't change the partition layout directly, but it could help you create a separate partition later if needed.
Y
YoungAriesArt
04-19-2025, 04:02 AM #25

The issue seems to be with the hparted utility in Linux Mint. It appears you can't modify the size of your main partition because it's fully occupied by other partitions. Since you're using it for running Linux Mint, you might need more free space elsewhere. Placing the Windows ISO on a USB drive won't change the partition layout directly, but it could help you create a separate partition later if needed.

Pages (3): Previous 1 2 3