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Linux mint alongside Windows
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<blockquote data-quote="SeriousHoax" data-source="post: 1114916" data-attributes="member: 78686"><p>I haven't tried dual booting Linux Mint but I've been dual booting Windows and Linux for a while. The distros I have tried are openSUSE Tumbleweed, Fedora, Arch and some other arch based distros. AFAIK, Linux Mint similar to Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, openSUSE works with secure boot out of the box. On your windows system just allocated some empty space where you want to install Linux by using Disk Management's shrink volume feature and while installing make Mint's installer choose that empty unallocated space and it should install in on that location.</p><p>Search, how to dual boot windows and linux mint on YouTube to understand the process better.</p><p>Or go with the VM way of VirtualBox/VMware as suggested above but the system performance won't be the same as a dedicated installation.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SeriousHoax, post: 1114916, member: 78686"] I haven't tried dual booting Linux Mint but I've been dual booting Windows and Linux for a while. The distros I have tried are openSUSE Tumbleweed, Fedora, Arch and some other arch based distros. AFAIK, Linux Mint similar to Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora, openSUSE works with secure boot out of the box. On your windows system just allocated some empty space where you want to install Linux by using Disk Management's shrink volume feature and while installing make Mint's installer choose that empty unallocated space and it should install in on that location. Search, how to dual boot windows and linux mint on YouTube to understand the process better. Or go with the VM way of VirtualBox/VMware as suggested above but the system performance won't be the same as a dedicated installation. [/QUOTE]
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