this post was submitted on 13 Nov 2023
16 points (86.4% liked)
Linux 101 stuff. Questions are encouraged, noobs are welcome!
1055 readers
1 users here now
Linux introductions, tips and tutorials. Questions are encouraged. Any distro, any platform! Explicitly noob-friendly.
founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Does having dual boot work completely fine without any quirks to look out for on disk management? For example, if I install both OSs on the same drive, or even if I install them on separate drives, can I access a non-system drive from both OSs? Is there any caveat of dual OS on disk drive management?
I've got two physically different drives. Can't say I've ever installed two OS's on the same disk.
My Linux system can modify my windows drive without any problems, but my windows OS can't even see my Linux drive. I'm thinking that this might be because windows can't read ext4 formatting.
If you use two physically separate drives, you can set boot order in your bios, so it's like having two completely different machines. Over the years I boot to windows less and less, only really keeping it around for FPS games that need anti-cheat software, and for VR stuff.