WARNING to anyone doing this, make sure all of your drives are unencrypted and that BitLocker is turned off before turning off secure boot. Ended up having to reinstall Windows after getting stuck in a BSOD cycle due to the drive being locked.
For anyone wondering how to do it (AI generated): **Disable Secure Boot:** 1. Open Windows Defender Security Center and click on Device Security. 2. If Secure Boot is mentioned, your PC has it. 3. Go to Settings > Windows Update and check for any pending updates. Install them. 4. Navigate to Troubleshoot > Advanced Options > UEFI Firmware Settings. 5. In your BIOS menu, find the Secure Boot setting (usually in Security, Boot, or Authentication tabs) and set it to Disabled. 6. Save changes and exit. **Disable BitLocker:** 1. Open the "Manage BitLocker" option from Windows Start menu and expand the drive you want to decrypt. 2. Click "Turn off BitLocker."
You have set the bar very high for all other support videos. I am 71 years old, a retired Police Officer, IT Manager, and quite adveturous. I insetalled on my 2 laptops without a hitch and it is all due to your excellent video. I liked and subscribed to your channel. Take care and continue to make difficult items very easy.
Sir, we all wish we could grow to be like you in our 70s, and that't coming from a 22, almost 23 years old guy! ❤ You should make videos about your life and your jobs, as i am interested in knowing what you know and what you'll know. Anyway
This step (3:00) - creating a hard-disk partition for Ubuntu to use - can be skipped (for Ubuntu 22.04.3 - not sure about older versions). After you select 'Install Ubuntu along Windows', the Ubuntu installer gives you the option of setting how much hard-disk space Ubuntu should take from your existing available hard-disk memory. It might be simpler and a lot safer than manually messing around with your "C:" drive yourself👍
Which one is safer though? Letting Ubuntu allocate space, or doing it manually from Disk Management? and why? (Not being rude, I don't know much about this)
Yes, i dont know why, but my harddisk got encrypted by BitLocker. I tried everything to deactivate it but i cant solve it. I get an error message that say "cant deactivate because it is already encrypting. Try later" wtf can someone help?
@@taimoorali818 I am pretty sure this is how you do it. you go back into the windows partition manager and find the chunk that you put linux in, right click the linux chunk and click delete volume (it will delete any data so it is imperative that its the right volume and all valuable data is backed up), after confirming it, the box should turn gray and say unallocated with a size, next you go to the main partition right click it and click EXTEND volume, it will bring up a wizard that will have a box on the right hand side labeled "selected" and will show the amount of space that is in the gray unallocated part (it wont be an exact match but will be super close), just click next all the way through and it should reattach to the main volume. sorry if its hard to understand, i suck at putting things to words in a clear and concise way.
Unbelievable - it worked! Thank you so much for doing this video, and for not making it massively overcomplicated, tedious and excessively long, like another video that I came across on the same subject.
Wow, it really works! The Amazon page for the $180 KAMRUI Mini PC I ordered never once mentioned Windows, so I was surprised to find Windows 11 installed. While searching for info to wipe the disk and installing Ubuntu I came across this video. Figured if things go south I’ve not lost anything; happily things went smoothly! Everything tracked the video except: - the Ubuntu screens are a little different … not surprising after a year. - took a little fishing to find the boot order screen on this PC; again, not surprising that firmware will differ.
Thanks a lot, it works for me. I use 2 SSD NVME M.2 and installed the Ubuntu on disk 1 and the Windows 11 on disk 2. So now I've two separated OS and separated memory allocation
@@teodordevda4882 you just need to install the Linux on SSD 1 and the Windows on SSD 2, I preferred to install the Linux first and then Windows. You can arrange the boot options in BIOS. And then use the grub (from Linux) to create the boot options on start up. So you can choose what OS that you will use
very informative - i've been wanting to create a dual boot setup with windows 11 and ubuntu for a while now, and this covered all the questions I had - thank you! I'm just transferring some files away from my c drive then i'm off to reformat.
Thank you for a great video! My Lenovo windows 11 PC wouldnt let me 'use a disk' in the reset options, so I pressed F12 during the boot (Lenovo Logo) and chose to boot from the usb drive to install ubuntu. All works well!
guys do not delete linux by the method he is telling , you will get a black screen with gnu and stuff and it took me a whole night to remove that and it was hell pls follow proper preocedure to remove it , the last part is really wrong and it would make so much mess for you
*ATTENTION PL* In case, you are not seeing "choose os option" after you have done all these things mentioned in the video and it only open you to the windows. Boot the device again with Ubuntu as you already did. You are done? But before you restart it after Ubuntu is installed, you should see a file named "install Ubuntu version whatever LTS" on screen with Ubuntu icon.. click that file it will do some more installation or will ask you to setup uname and password if you haven't already.. Once it is complete, restart the computer, hoping it will be fine now.
Thank you so much, I can now dual-boot Windows and Linux. One thing to add, when you switch the safe boot off, your screen might go black the next time you try to boot. To fix this, press the reset button or remove and then put back the CMOS battery. This should fix the issue most of the time.
I never saw better instructional video on whole YT ever, nevermind if its PC related or not. Reason? I got all i need, and even more, i learned some realy cool tricks and shortcuts and functionalities and so nicely explained and shown that no one, no one can ever make a mistake. I think il go to explore more of this chanel, thanks and God bless you..
in order to have the install along side windows option, you need to have the partitions for ubuntu already created, you can do this through windows and the ubuntu installation takes care os the configuration
3:02 > _"choose shrink volume"_ how long has this option been around in windows & other OSes? woww, how come i never thought that this option would exist. i have been manually emptying the drives by moving _ALL_ of its data to some other drive, and then repartitioning the now empty drive. and because of this lack of knowledge, i was unable to proceed any further since i needed to repartition a drive containing huge amount of data. this "shrink volume" action is gonna be a life savor. sooooo great.
It's been around since windows XP, at least. I had it figured out when I was much younger and I would play around with my dad's old office PC. Ironically I ran into many issues partitioning the drive now when I'm supposedly "brainier" as opposed to my younger self getting it right in the first attempt when I had no idea what I was doing 😅.. but upon further inspection it's due to unmovable files which despite numerous efforts to get rid off or disable temporarily I haven't been able to achieve fully. So I can only shrink volume to like 30-40%.. so I had to use a third party partitioning app and it was able to get the job done. It was annoying though to do all that when I have installed Linux distros including Ubuntu before and never ran into those kind of problems.
5:45 How are we esuring that the linux installation chooses the partition we created earlier?? It seems to me like it's by default installing to my C-drive. You should have not skipped this part. Good video overall and thanks!
And yeah, my linux partition seems to be completely unused, everything must be installed in C. Have I missed something or was this part not clarified well in the video?
Nice quick presentation. I wasn't expecting this and it was interesting as I've always installed a second drive for linux. And even with Slackware (1995, no less), it impressed me that linux asked if you wanted to dual boot when it saw the Windows installation. Thanks Rob. And thanks for setting up the give-away thing with SimplyNIC.
I had a PC with a 80486DX CPU back then running at 33MHz, and was able to dual-boot it using the Linux Slackware distro and the MS-DOS it originally had!!! The hard-disk had a total of 400MB (the PC itself I think had 8MB RAM that were being tested every time it booted up :-))
Can i make a recovery Windows USB after I've installed dual boot? i've onyl got a 32gb usb - want to first download ubuntu onto it..install that...then dual boot is there..Then I'll go to download windows recovery to that USB?...any issues with doing this?
Plz be specific 5:10 on which drive to install . Select the drive you have partioned manually other wise using install alongside windows will ( i my case i didnt partitioned the drive that had windows but my second ssd) create a partiton on disk which will not be visible in the file explorer. I dont know what will happen if someday windows crashes and needs to be reinstalled (i suppose linux will be erased ) better safe than sorry
This is the easiest and most clear dual boot tutorial I have found. However, has anyone tried doing this with Arch Linux? That distribution is very optimized for x86-64 devices.
At 5:05 when I go to use a device then it shows 2 options - First being efi USB device, when I click it, it shows the selected boot device failed. What to do?
6:24 i restarted at this point, removed the drive when it asked me to, and now it seems like i hadnt done anything. i dont see ubuntu in the boot list or anywhere. how do i get back to ubuntu without using the usb again?
@@dave_r To the best of my knowledge, no. I found the easiest way was to boot off a usb stick with mint, the Mount the efi partition, and delete the Ubuntu folder. It ca be done using the CLI in Windows, but it’s a bit complicated, though it is possible to Google the method for a clean removal. Hope this helps.
Hey , help me out here I followed the steps And when I reached 4:19 I restarted the WiFi settings So it asked for a password, I couldn't go back , I tried a few passwords( giving it a shot) and it kind of blocked me The error is " Enter incorrect password 3 times please power off your system and reboot it again, system halted " Note: I don't have power button, it kind of popped out and I use a pin to press a reset button beside SD card port ,and start my laptop 😅 Can anyone guide me here I'm waiting for my laptop to die now coz I don't have a detachable battery
Nice vid! Two questions: 1. May I delete the what was saved in the USB during that process, or I may be required to use it sometime in the future for the maintanance of the OS? 2. If Ubuntu exists in the BIOS Boot Menu but doesn't boot, should I connect the USB Drive I used for that process again?
its one time, you have to plug it in, and not plug out untill you restart and it tells you to remove installation medium and then press enter, thats when you remove the instollation medium (usb) and you dont have to plug it in again
You've been away too long "BOB", we've missed you. Always a wealth of interesting and useful information. Hopefully you can get back into your usual routine
I have two drives in my computer. I put Linux Mint on the second drive. I followed your installation and all went well untill... the BIOS is not seeing the second drive in the Boot Order list in BIOS. Any idea what I did wrong? I hope you or another Linux boffin sees this.
Don't listen to taking bitlocker off... see what happens. I saw some saying it won't happen. It most certainly will. And it will very much have you back to youtube, downloading a USB and disabling secure boot and never long enough to boot from a live USB installation of which is found on the Microsoft Windows 11 Help page on how to fix this problem. Either save your encryption key and back up a recovery key or both. I forgot how sensitive it was and I sent my gen 13 i7 1365u, 32gb into a boot loop and had to make my own USB boot drive as well as a boot drive now for almost every major Linux distro.
After the dual boot I'm able to run Ubuntu without any error, but, Windows OS is resulting in an error(Automatic Repair Error). Not sure what I did wrong. How do I fix this ?
Hello a bit late but, What you need to do is try and run the windows repair because the Microsoft Defender is recognizing Ubuntu as a malicious software on your drive, that or your computer, after partitoning doesn't have enough space in order to be able to run Windows.
During ubuntu installation, after connecting internet and clicking next, it asks that your system has Intel RTS installed and it has to be turned off. What am I supposed to do there? I'm using dell i7 8th generation touch screen.
@@saptadipdas343 When you need to remove the dual booted machine you just deleted that volume and you have to remove the grub boot from the system partition.
@@saptadipdas343if you not using linux anymore and only want the pc to boot directly to windows like normal, you have to remove grub for not have to do some extra work when start pc
I have c, d ,e,f drives on ky conputer. I want to onstall ubuntu on f: drive which has 30 gb dree space put pf 30 gb. Will i get option to choose drive while installing Linux?
You are the best of the west. I was able to do it along with what peopl say either bitlocket and blah blah also either chat gpt telling me how to turn that off lol
Thank you for your tutorial...For some testing porpuses I need to install an Ubuntu server along side my windows so I can switch my PC to a server and access it from other computers on the local network, is this tutorial also work for Ubuntu server?
Yo ik this is a dumb question but why can't i see my Ubuntu boot on the Use a device options in the bios? I only see "Internal hard disk" and "USB Drive (UEFI)". Internal hard disk boots me into windows and USB drive doesn't boot into Linux
I have a Asus zenbook duo and when I get to the page where it says installation type I don't get the option to boot alongside windows. Does anyone have a fix
Hey bro i have ubuntu install i wnat windows 10 to in my pc can you tell me how to dual boot windows. because there are only window in internet with ubuntu dual boot.
Thanks beautifully explained ill install today in my collegues system, i want to ask you one thing which software you use to record screen even you are in bios the screen recording is nice . which tool to use thanks.....
hub 6-0:1.0: config failed, hub doesn't have have any ports!(err-19). Showing like this. Also updated system graphic card and system by getting into nomodeset cmd but same problem while booting to linux. Device: laptop Lenovo loq gen 9 amd 7 7000 series 4050 rtx. Please someone help me to solve this
I have been trying to use windows boot manager instead of GRUB to choose os but can't do it. I have two os into two different drives. Is there any way to do that in windows 11? Thanks in advance.
So I installed CachyOS and when I reboot there is no dual boot option, it just goes right into Windows 11. I went into my BIOS and went to HDD BBS Priorities and placed the Linux boot manager first but that did not make any difference at all. To be clear I installed CachyOS on an 8TB drive that is different than the 1TB NVME drive Windows is installed on. Any suggestions?
Good video, However do more research before removing Ubuntu. The Ubuntu boot loader takes precedence over the windows so following this step without enabling windows bootloader might brick your system. Speaking form experience
I have a question, I just installed 24.04 and my Wi-Fi 6 card doesn't have a driver made yet so it isn't recognized but I got this Panda Wi-Fi adapter AC600. I have those drivers downloaded but I need the "Basic Essential" driver packages or something to be able to extract my folder, well to use "make", but I do not know where I can download that driver from all the mirrors either send me to 404 page or just doesn't open. The computer with Ubuntu has no internet, it has no ethernet IO port, it doesn't have a USB tethering cord to connect to another computer for internet, it is dual-loaded on with a Windows 11 that can connect to the internet. Anyone able to help with my situation? lol Please and thank you lmao
Hello! So After turning off safe boot then booting linux. It will automatically install on the free space you made before? Without telling it to specifically? Thanks!
My restart time is long ... I could not click Ubuntu while restarting ... The system automatically took Ubuntu as the option and it's black screen totally now ... is there a solution to this?
After installing and restarting i get a screen saying Minimal BASH like line editing is supported. GNU GRUB version 2.06 i can't get out of this screen. Someone please help
WARNING to anyone doing this, make sure all of your drives are unencrypted and that BitLocker is turned off before turning off secure boot. Ended up having to reinstall Windows after getting stuck in a BSOD cycle due to the drive being locked.
How to do that?
Please tell me how to do it..
Glad I saw your comment, literally just saved my ass.
late to see this comment😢
For anyone wondering how to do it (AI generated):
**Disable Secure Boot:**
1. Open Windows Defender Security Center and click on Device Security.
2. If Secure Boot is mentioned, your PC has it.
3. Go to Settings > Windows Update and check for any pending updates. Install them.
4. Navigate to Troubleshoot > Advanced Options > UEFI Firmware Settings.
5. In your BIOS menu, find the Secure Boot setting (usually in Security, Boot, or Authentication tabs) and set it to Disabled.
6. Save changes and exit.
**Disable BitLocker:**
1. Open the "Manage BitLocker" option from Windows Start menu and expand the drive you want to decrypt.
2. Click "Turn off BitLocker."
i cant believe i have managed to make a piece of coloured glass and a penguin live together
Winux. Or since penguins live in igloos, Wingloo. Igloo with a tinted window
@@ThatRandomLinuxUser i tried to think of a reply but i couldnt
😅Nice one!
You have set the bar very high for all other support videos. I am 71 years old, a retired Police Officer, IT Manager, and quite adveturous. I insetalled on my 2 laptops without a hitch and it is all due to your excellent video. I liked and subscribed to your channel. Take care and continue to make difficult items very easy.
71? Wow sir thats awesome
you were a police officer AND a IT manager? Thats awesome
Sir, we all wish we could grow to be like you in our 70s, and that't coming from a 22, almost 23 years old guy! ❤ You should make videos about your life and your jobs, as i am interested in knowing what you know and what you'll know. Anyway
Awesome… 😮😮😮
This step (3:00) - creating a hard-disk partition for Ubuntu to use - can be skipped (for Ubuntu 22.04.3 - not sure about older versions). After you select 'Install Ubuntu along Windows', the Ubuntu installer gives you the option of setting how much hard-disk space Ubuntu should take from your existing available hard-disk memory. It might be simpler and a lot safer than manually messing around with your "C:" drive yourself👍
Which one is safer though? Letting Ubuntu allocate space, or doing it manually from Disk Management? and why? (Not being rude, I don't know much about this)
When you allocate space from disk management does ubuntu automatically know to install on the empty space?
Yes, i dont know why, but my harddisk got encrypted by BitLocker. I tried everything to deactivate it but i cant solve it. I get an error message that say "cant deactivate because it is already encrypting. Try later" wtf can someone help?
but how to delete ubuntu when you're done with it?
@@taimoorali818 I am pretty sure this is how you do it.
you go back into the windows partition manager and find the chunk that you put linux in, right click the linux chunk and click delete volume (it will delete any data so it is imperative that its the right volume and all valuable data is backed up), after confirming it, the box should turn gray and say unallocated with a size, next you go to the main partition right click it and click EXTEND volume, it will bring up a wizard that will have a box on the right hand side labeled "selected" and will show the amount of space that is in the gray unallocated part (it wont be an exact match but will be super close), just click next all the way through and it should reattach to the main volume.
sorry if its hard to understand, i suck at putting things to words in a clear and concise way.
For anyone whose Ubuntu installation fails use the 'Delete volume' method shown in the last section (7:31) and try again.
Great tutorial! 👍
Thanks! For some reason a system error occurred and i had to do it again
Unbelievable - it worked! Thank you so much for doing this video, and for not making it massively overcomplicated, tedious and excessively long, like another video that I came across on the same subject.
Wow, it really works!
The Amazon page for the $180 KAMRUI Mini PC I ordered never once mentioned Windows, so I was surprised to find Windows 11 installed. While searching for info to wipe the disk and installing Ubuntu I came across this video. Figured if things go south I’ve not lost anything; happily things went smoothly!
Everything tracked the video except:
- the Ubuntu screens are a little different … not surprising after a year.
- took a little fishing to find the boot order screen on this PC; again, not surprising that firmware will differ.
Did you delete bitlocker before installing ubuntu?
Thank you i never thought i can access to the bios that quickly like you did! instead of restarting the pc everytime you need a configuration.
Thanks a lot, it works for me. I use 2 SSD NVME M.2 and installed the Ubuntu on disk 1 and the Windows 11 on disk 2. So now I've two separated OS and separated memory allocation
When it comes to select the space where to install Ubuntu, what were your actions? I am planning to install Linux having 2 ssd in pc.
@@teodordevda4882 you just need to install the Linux on SSD 1 and the Windows on SSD 2, I preferred to install the Linux first and then Windows. You can arrange the boot options in BIOS.
And then use the grub (from Linux) to create the boot options on start up. So you can choose what OS that you will use
Very short and precise. straight forward, so helpful thank you
I hate windows so much at this point that I'll take anything, the only reason I haven't completely switched is because of Gaming
You can't install steam and play games on Linux?
@@vaibhavyadav3069 linux has steam but not all games are available, but its possible using protondb
@@vaibhavyadav3069 you can, but performance will be better on windows
@@vaibhavyadav3069you can, I do, it’s the 2 games that I like to play that have no Linux support that causes me to use windows.
@@vaibhavyadav3069 you can, with extra steps look it up
1 year later, still works to the T. Best guide for install, I use etcher for flash but worked the same.
I am not getting the use a new device option from 5:02 only getting troubleshoot and turn pc off
Exactly, did you find a solution for this?
Yes me too
Same
@@ssathvikgoud843 I would recommend stackoverflow
Go to system BIOS while restarting and select ubuntu
very informative - i've been wanting to create a dual boot setup with windows 11 and ubuntu for a while now, and this covered all the questions I had - thank you! I'm just transferring some files away from my c drive then i'm off to reformat.
same! pretty happy with the results. thanks to this guy.
Thank you for a great video! My Lenovo windows 11 PC wouldnt let me 'use a disk' in the reset options, so I pressed F12 during the boot (Lenovo Logo) and chose to boot from the usb drive to install ubuntu. All works well!
Same was happening for me, glad I saw your comment, thanks!
I'm glad to watch your comment 🎉
guys do not delete linux by the method he is telling , you will get a black screen with gnu and stuff and it took me a whole night to remove that and it was hell pls follow proper preocedure to remove it , the last part is really wrong and it would make so much mess for you
*ATTENTION PL*
In case, you are not seeing "choose os option" after you have done all these things mentioned in the video and it only open you to the windows.
Boot the device again with Ubuntu as you already did. You are done? But before you restart it after Ubuntu is installed, you should see a file named "install Ubuntu version whatever LTS" on screen with Ubuntu icon.. click that file it will do some more installation or will ask you to setup uname and password if you haven't already..
Once it is complete, restart the computer, hoping it will be fine now.
Thank you so much, I can now dual-boot Windows and Linux. One thing to add, when you switch the safe boot off, your screen might go black the next time you try to boot. To fix this, press the reset button or remove and then put back the CMOS battery. This should fix the issue most of the time.
this is the best guide ever. everything from partition to installation was wonderful. thank you for the guide!
I never saw better instructional video on whole YT ever, nevermind if its PC related or not. Reason? I got all i need, and even more, i learned some realy cool tricks and shortcuts and functionalities and so nicely explained and shown that no one, no one can ever make a mistake. I think il go to explore more of this chanel, thanks and God bless you..
In Cmd type the following to reboot into bios without pressing or holding anything.
Shutdown /r /t 0 /fw
Worked! Thanks bro! I was worried when my eyes didn't see the Windows boot loader. But my eyes were wrong
in order to have the install along side windows option, you need to have the partitions for ubuntu already created, you can do this through windows and the ubuntu installation takes care os the configuration
Probably the best video I have seen on the subject. Very helpfull!!
Got to disable bitlocker, but this video was all in all very precious. Thanks!
How to enable data encryption again
3:02 > _"choose shrink volume"_
how long has this option been around in windows & other OSes?
woww, how come i never thought that this option would exist.
i have been manually emptying the drives by moving _ALL_ of its data to some other drive, and then repartitioning the now empty drive. and because of this lack of knowledge, i was unable to proceed any further since i needed to repartition a drive containing huge amount of data.
this "shrink volume" action is gonna be a life savor. sooooo great.
It's been around since windows XP, at least. I had it figured out when I was much younger and I would play around with my dad's old office PC. Ironically I ran into many issues partitioning the drive now when I'm supposedly "brainier" as opposed to my younger self getting it right in the first attempt when I had no idea what I was doing 😅.. but upon further inspection it's due to unmovable files which despite numerous efforts to get rid off or disable temporarily I haven't been able to achieve fully. So I can only shrink volume to like 30-40%.. so I had to use a third party partitioning app and it was able to get the job done. It was annoying though to do all that when I have installed Linux distros including Ubuntu before and never ran into those kind of problems.
For the newer devices consider to disable Intel RTS before starting installation
5:45 How are we esuring that the linux installation chooses the partition we created earlier?? It seems to me like it's by default installing to my C-drive. You should have not skipped this part.
Good video overall and thanks!
And yeah, my linux partition seems to be completely unused, everything must be installed in C. Have I missed something or was this part not clarified well in the video?
Try choosing the GPT option while using rufus to install the Ubuntu system, if your BIOS has uefi enabled
Nice quick presentation. I wasn't expecting this and it was interesting as I've always installed a second drive for linux. And even with Slackware (1995, no less), it impressed me that linux asked if you wanted to dual boot when it saw the Windows installation. Thanks Rob. And thanks for setting up the give-away thing with SimplyNIC.
Ah, the Ole Good Slackware. And there was SLS before.
I had a PC with a 80486DX CPU back then running at 33MHz, and was able to dual-boot it using the Linux Slackware distro and the MS-DOS it originally had!!! The hard-disk had a total of 400MB (the PC itself I think had 8MB RAM that were being tested every time it booted up :-))
That was as straightforward as can be. Thank you so much!
Simple and effective! Needed the refresher, thanks so much!
Can i make a recovery Windows USB after I've installed dual boot?
i've onyl got a 32gb usb - want to first download ubuntu onto it..install that...then dual boot is there..Then I'll go to download windows recovery to that USB?...any issues with doing this?
Great video, appreciate you adding the steps to how to revert the changes, and the shortcuts for entering BIOS
Plz be specific 5:10 on which drive to install . Select the drive you have partioned manually other wise using install alongside windows will ( i my case i didnt partitioned the drive that had windows but my second ssd) create a partiton on disk which will not be visible in the file explorer. I dont know what will happen if someday windows crashes and needs to be reinstalled (i suppose linux will be erased ) better safe than sorry
Thank you for this awesome step by step tutorial!
This is the easiest and most clear dual boot tutorial I have found.
However, has anyone tried doing this with Arch Linux? That distribution is very optimized for x86-64 devices.
I did this for my old 2020 msi laptop. It works!
At 5:05 when I go to use a device then it shows 2 options -
First being efi USB device, when I click it, it shows the selected boot device failed. What to do?
Have you got any solution?
@@ShubhankitSingh Nope 🥲
great and clear video, wish more tutorials were like this.
Thanks that worked without any issues. All point direct on the target..
6:24 i restarted at this point, removed the drive when it asked me to, and now it seems like i hadnt done anything. i dont see ubuntu in the boot list or anywhere. how do i get back to ubuntu without using the usb again?
All well but as i hit enter button, black screen pop up and nothings happening, laptop not even able to shut down, what do i do? Please reply
is it resolved now
Yes, is it resolved now
Worked like a charm, awesome video bro
5:51 you skipped this part really fast, so installer will automatically find unallocated partition on same drive as windows?
5:08 when i press enter it shows alot of codes like a command line not a user interface
Removing Linux isn’t that easy. You have to also delete the EFI files on a hidden partition.
@@dave_r To the best of my knowledge, no. I found the easiest way was to boot off a usb stick with mint, the Mount the efi partition, and delete the Ubuntu folder. It ca be done using the CLI in Windows, but it’s a bit complicated, though it is possible to Google the method for a clean removal. Hope this helps.
@@littleshubunkin7926 Thanks!
Nice machine more then 40 years ago was a dream a pc soo small
. thanks fpr the video
thank you so much, i succsecfully duel booted without any issues, take my like
Hey , help me out here
I followed the steps
And when I reached 4:19
I restarted the WiFi settings
So it asked for a password, I couldn't go back , I tried a few passwords( giving it a shot) and it kind of blocked me
The error is
" Enter incorrect password 3 times please power off your system and reboot it again, system halted
"
Note: I don't have power button, it kind of popped out and I use a pin to press a reset button beside SD card port ,and start my laptop 😅
Can anyone guide me here
I'm waiting for my laptop to die now coz I don't have a detachable battery
You missed mentioning that GRUB still exists when you remove the linux partition. I ended up having a hard time booting windows again afterwards.
Exactly what I needed to know and explained clearly and quickly, cheers mate, got yourself another sub :)
love the video, short and on point. But does this also work if you want to multi-boot Linux as a 3rd operating system?
Nice vid! Two questions: 1. May I delete the what was saved in the USB during that process, or I may be required to use it sometime in the future for the maintanance of the OS? 2. If Ubuntu exists in the BIOS Boot Menu but doesn't boot, should I connect the USB Drive I used for that process again?
Delete it. Also, everything on your Hard drive. Its safer that way.
Thank you for this tutorial. It's very simple and easy to understand
Question:-> do i have to plugin the usb every time i use Linux Or its just a one time thing ?
its a one time thing
its one time, you have to plug it in, and not plug out untill you restart and it tells you to remove installation medium and then press enter, thats when you remove the instollation medium (usb) and you dont have to plug it in again
Ok so I didn't have enough space for partition on my ssd so I put it on my hdd. Buy it didn't use the 25 gb space I made for it. Do I just unstall?
update never mind it did use it lol
You've been away too long "BOB", we've missed you. Always a wealth of interesting and useful information. Hopefully you can get back into your usual routine
This is awesome! Great work and thanks!
I have two drives in my computer. I put Linux Mint on the second drive. I followed your installation and all went well untill... the BIOS is not seeing the second drive in the Boot Order list in BIOS. Any idea what I did wrong? I hope you or another Linux boffin sees this.
Do you have to use C: drive? Could I choose another physical drive instead for the Linux partition?
I think it’s even better
Thanks!
Welcome!
Don't listen to taking bitlocker off... see what happens. I saw some saying it won't happen. It most certainly will. And it will very much have you back to youtube, downloading a USB and disabling secure boot and never long enough to boot from a live USB installation of which is found on the Microsoft Windows 11 Help page on how to fix this problem. Either save your encryption key and back up a recovery key or both. I forgot how sensitive it was and I sent my gen 13 i7 1365u, 32gb into a boot loop and had to make my own USB boot drive as well as a boot drive now for almost every major Linux distro.
After the dual boot I'm able to run Ubuntu without any error, but, Windows OS is resulting in an error(Automatic Repair Error).
Not sure what I did wrong. How do I fix this ?
Hello a bit late but,
What you need to do is try and run the windows repair because the Microsoft Defender is recognizing Ubuntu as a malicious software on your drive, that or your computer, after partitoning doesn't have enough space in order to be able to run Windows.
Thankyou so much…it worked…But turn off device encryption before turning off secure boot
Thank you very much! Should secure boot be turned on again after succesful installation?
I have a pretty similar bios but the boot option was under security instead of boot.
During ubuntu installation, after connecting internet and clicking next, it asks that your system has Intel RTS installed and it has to be turned off. What am I supposed to do there? I'm using dell i7 8th generation touch screen.
Can you remove the USB key after successfully booting from linux ?
After it's been installed, yes.
@@Robtech Thanks !
We also need to remove the grub bootloader manually, you should show this also
What's the need for that?
@@saptadipdas343 When you need to remove the dual booted machine you just deleted that volume and you have to remove the grub boot from the system partition.
@@saptadipdas343if you not using linux anymore and only want the pc to boot directly to windows like normal, you have to remove grub for not have to do some extra work when start pc
Why?
Please explain why, cause I am noob at this? Is it regarding removal of Ubuntu?
I have c, d ,e,f drives on ky conputer. I want to onstall ubuntu on f: drive which has 30 gb dree space put pf 30 gb. Will i get option to choose drive while installing Linux?
You are the best of the west. I was able to do it along with what peopl say either bitlocket and blah blah also either chat gpt telling me how to turn that off lol
It works! Thank you very much for this tutorial
How to enable data encryption again.
Thanks Bro, Simple Tutorial, keep it up👍👍
Thank you for your tutorial...For some testing porpuses I need to install an Ubuntu server along side my windows so I can switch my PC to a server and access it from other computers on the local network, is this tutorial also work for Ubuntu server?
will you lose your windows progress? like if i have a preinstalled app like steam will it uninstall all of the old apps i installed onto it
No because Windows will be on a separate partition from Unbuntu.
Beautifully explained. Thank youuu for this!
Yo ik this is a dumb question but why can't i see my Ubuntu boot on the Use a device options in the bios? I only see "Internal hard disk" and "USB Drive (UEFI)". Internal hard disk boots me into windows and USB drive doesn't boot into Linux
Lay7afdk akhoya zin
2:29 CrowdStrike AD!
I have a Asus zenbook duo and when I get to the page where it says installation type I don't get the option to boot alongside windows. Does anyone have a fix
very clear explanation
Is it okay to use c drive for partition, or I have to create separate drive in windows 11 ?
One of the best video soe far clean set up
Hi I have trouble after restarting, I did not get the option of troubleshooting ubuntu
Perfect.. best video on this stuff. Nice job!
hey i have a 250GB SSD, it wont let me partition more than 6016 MB, which is definetly not enough to run the OS, what should i do use my HDD instead?
Hey bro i have ubuntu install i wnat windows 10 to in my pc can you tell me how to dual boot windows. because there are only window in internet with ubuntu dual boot.
Thanks beautifully explained ill install today in my collegues system, i want to ask you one thing which software you use to record screen even you are in bios the screen recording is nice . which tool to use thanks.....
most likely a capture card along with multiple pcs
hub 6-0:1.0: config failed, hub doesn't have have any ports!(err-19). Showing like this. Also updated system graphic card and system by getting into nomodeset cmd but same problem while booting to linux. Device: laptop Lenovo loq gen 9 amd 7 7000 series 4050 rtx. Please someone help me to solve this
I have been trying to use windows boot manager instead of GRUB to choose os but can't do it. I have two os into two different drives. Is there any way to do that in windows 11? Thanks in advance.
I am facing the same issue. Window 11 is not booting even after clicking Window Boot Manager(on dev/sda2). You got any solution?
@@analyticsace No. I am still using the grub boot loader.
So I installed CachyOS and when I reboot there is no dual boot option, it just goes right into Windows 11. I went into my BIOS and went to HDD BBS Priorities and placed the Linux boot manager first but that did not make any difference at all. To be clear I installed CachyOS on an 8TB drive that is different than the 1TB NVME drive Windows is installed on. Any suggestions?
Really helped me thanks alot sir👏👍🙏
Good video, However do more research before removing Ubuntu. The Ubuntu boot loader takes precedence over the windows so following this step without enabling windows bootloader might brick your system. Speaking form experience
you should be able to just fix it by going into bios on startup though right?
Hi i i stalled my linux with dual boot without srinking the strorage will it affect any how and can i customise is latter if i want?
I have a question, I just installed 24.04 and my Wi-Fi 6 card doesn't have a driver made yet so it isn't recognized but I got this Panda Wi-Fi adapter AC600. I have those drivers downloaded but I need the "Basic Essential" driver packages or something to be able to extract my folder, well to use "make", but I do not know where I can download that driver from all the mirrors either send me to 404 page or just doesn't open. The computer with Ubuntu has no internet, it has no ethernet IO port, it doesn't have a USB tethering cord to connect to another computer for internet, it is dual-loaded on with a Windows 11 that can connect to the internet. Anyone able to help with my situation? lol Please and thank you lmao
Hello! So After turning off safe boot then booting linux. It will automatically install on the free space you made before? Without telling it to specifically? Thanks!
My restart time is long ... I could not click Ubuntu while restarting ... The system automatically took Ubuntu as the option and it's black screen totally now ... is there a solution to this?
😢
After installing and restarting i get a screen saying Minimal BASH like line editing is supported. GNU GRUB version 2.06 i can't get out of this screen. Someone please help
is it needed to backup files before one perform this? any danger of getting stuck in middle and crashing the pc?
When i boot into ubuntu and perform restart/shutdown it stucks in startup screen and i need to do it manually. What may be the issue?
me too facing the same issue. Did you found any solution?
Any suggestions on how to fix