@cannedtuna@lemmy.world to memes@lemmy.world • 22 days agoEvery. Single. Time.lemmy.worldimagemessage-square133arrow-up1961
arrow-up1961imageEvery. Single. Time.lemmy.world@cannedtuna@lemmy.world to memes@lemmy.world • 22 days agomessage-square133
minus-square@marcos@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink11•21 days agoWell, that’s a first. The usual way is for Windows to break the Linux install every time it does anything.
minus-square@Ludrol@szmer.infolinkfedilink3•21 days agoSomehow I learned how to install my systems without windows doing that.
minus-square@mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.comlinkfedilinkEnglish4•21 days agoI’m guessing you have different drives, instead of using partitions. Windows only breaks bootloaders when it’s sharing a drive.
minus-square@Ludrol@szmer.infolinkfedilink4•21 days agoNope. Install windows on clean disk Install Linux with custom partitions Add 3 new partitions (/boot, /, swap) Enable os-prober for grub Set grub as boot in BIOS Never had problem with windows nuking the bootloader. It never knows it exists.
minus-squarenickwitha_k (he/him)linkfedilink4•21 days ago Windows update intentionally bricks GRUB. Delete Windows.
Well, that’s a first. The usual way is for Windows to break the Linux install every time it does anything.
Somehow I learned how to install my systems without windows doing that.
I’m guessing you have different drives, instead of using partitions. Windows only breaks bootloaders when it’s sharing a drive.
Nope.
Add 3 new partitions (/boot, /, swap)
Never had problem with windows nuking the bootloader. It never knows it exists.