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    Replacing your Operating System

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    • A Former User
      A Former User last edited by

      Are you sure the other drive is empty, and large enough?

      Not empty. Should it be EMPTY?? Like empty-empty??

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      • A Former User
        A Former User last edited by

        Either that, or the other drive contains your system backup image ...

        I have no idea about the "image". No backups of the system I could see; disc D seems free from that, in any case >_>

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        • sgunhouse
          sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by

          As in, if you right-click on the drive in Explorer, Properties will say "0 bytes used, xx GB free". You are talking about reformatting it, there had better be nothing you can't lose there.

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          • A Former User
            A Former User last edited by

            Oh, no! There are lots of stuff there! :awww:

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            • linuxmint7
              linuxmint7 last edited by

              What make and model is your computer, laptop (nettop ?) joshl ?.

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              • A Former User
                A Former User last edited by

                No, not joshl, - Samsung NP N-110(-KA02RU it seems).

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                • linuxmint7
                  linuxmint7 last edited by

                  Ah!/oh!, It's a netbook, and does not have a CD drive.

                  http://oi49.tinypic.com/2v17l7s.jpg

                  Do you have a 4GB USB flash drive/Memory stick that is empty/blank joshl ?.

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                  • sgunhouse
                    sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                    Most of those take SD cards ... when I installed Mageia to my old netbook I used an external optical drive. But most distros tell you how to dump an ISO to a media card or USB key these days.

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                    • A Former User
                      A Former User last edited by

                      Most of those take SD cards ...

                      That's true.

                      So, will I need to throw away/move gigabytes of files to make it for a second OS? Cards and sticks are not tidily enough incorporated to the hard body of the PC. Then - move?..

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                      • linuxmint7
                        linuxmint7 last edited by

                        You could use a USB flash drive/memory stick just for testing Linux and (if you like it) installing it to the computers internal hard drive (as dual boot) then format/wipe/blank the USB flash drive/memory stick, as it would not be needed any more.

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                        • A Former User
                          A Former User last edited by

                          Linux, to give it a try, shall I have a totally empty drive?
                          (It is irrelevant if it'll be a USB or SD, isn't it?)

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                          • linuxmint7
                            linuxmint7 last edited by

                            Yes, it is best if it is empty. Do you have an empty SD card or USB flash drive/memory stick ?.

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                            • A Former User
                              A Former User last edited by

                              Yes, it is best if it is empty.

                              What if it's just bought, for example - should I better format it still? Or will it be not necessary?

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                              • linuxmint7
                                linuxmint7 last edited by

                                Does it have anything on it when you look inside it on the computer ?, I'm asking because a lot of new flash drives come with software on them already, such as 'Back-up' software or 'Encryption' software. If it does have anything on it (such as the above), then yes, it is best to format it first.

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                                • A Former User
                                  A Former User last edited by

                                  You are talking about reformatting it, there had better be nothing you can't lose there.

                                  Steve, what if that disc is more-than-half empty (btw, there's a fair uninterrupted space on the disc - as long as my defragmentation analysis has shown)?
                                  Is formatting truly necessary? Am I to lose those stored files if I try to put a Linux there as it is now?

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                                  • A Former User
                                    A Former User last edited by

                                    Does it have anything on it when you look inside it on the computer ?,

                                    What's wrong with your punctuating skills? 😛
                                    No, such new drives are not usually void. I guess I won't lose anything if I lose those... <_<

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                                    • linuxmint7
                                      linuxmint7 last edited by

                                      Does it have anything on it when you look inside it on the computer ?,

                                      What's wrong with your punctuating skills?

                                      I was putting/typing it in simple terms, so as not to sound confusing.

                                      No, nothing of value will be lost if you format the drive.

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                                      • A Former User
                                        A Former User last edited by

                                        There perhaps is another possibility (people are talking about): what is a virtual box?

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                                        • sgunhouse
                                          sgunhouse Moderator Volunteer last edited by

                                          You know that Windows now uses NTFS, while it used to use something else? You know that Mac systems use something completely different - if you were to take a drive actually formatted for OSX and plug it into Windows you won't be able to read it? Linux uses its own completely different file system. The Linux installer can chop a piece off of an existing partition to reformat for its own use, but Windows had better not have anything in that piece because a low-level reformat can not be undone.

                                          While Linux can read a Windows-formatted disk. Linux uses a different set of file properties that Windows just doesn't track. Linux files have an owner and a group, they track when they were created and not just last modified ... stuff like that.

                                          Virtualbox is a virtual machine (aka VM), it can allow you to run two different systems at the same time - not merely on the same hardware, but actually both running. I've never really had a use for that.

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                                          • A Former User
                                            A Former User last edited by

                                            You know that Windows now uses NTFS..?

                                            Have no idea. Even don't know what it is... :rolleyes:

                                            The Linux installer can chop a piece off of an existing partition to reformat for its own use, but Windows had better not have anything in that piece because a low-level reformat can not be undone.

                                            You mean once it's installed, it won't be messing badly with my own private files should I place them into that partition?

                                            Linux files have an owner and a group, they track when they were created and not just last modified ... stuff like that.

                                            🆙
                                            (In my Windows though, I sorta have a "Created" property, too.)

                                            Virtualbox is a virtual machine (aka VM), it can allow you to run two different systems at the same time - not merely on the same hardware, but actually both running.

                                            Is it that the CPU and such things should be more powerful for that?

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