I know most of computers will be fine, but maybe you have offfers ?
can I put LINUX, WINDOWS and MAC on the same computer and change with a button ?
I know most of computers will be fine, but maybe you have offfers ?
can I put LINUX, WINDOWS and MAC on the same computer and change with a button ?
You could install Windows and then use a virtualization software like VMware or VirtualBox and run GNU/Linux off that. That's what I, for one, do anyway.
Devoted my life to programming...
Currently, the only way you can toggle between OSes so easily is via virtualization (as GReaper mentioned) or a KVM switch.
The best way to have multiple OSes on one machine if you intend to seriously use both, is by putting them on separate HDDs, so if you this is what you really want, look for a laptop with/supporting multiple HDDs.
EDIT: On second thought, finding a laptop with a second bay can be hard, and a little pricey.
Last edited by Yarin; 12-02-2013 at 08:19 PM.
Well, partitions kind of suck; the drive can only be formatted one way and all the OSes you would want to install on one HDD would need to understand said format. Windows is pretty picky, the last time I checked.
Last edited by Hodor; 12-02-2013 at 09:05 PM.
What software did you use to make the partitions?
Ah, so you installed *nix first. That makes a difference because if you install windows first, the process is basically very different.
My laptop came with Windows pre-installed and I installed linux (dual boot) after. I used gparted to reclaim diskspace (I shrunk the NTFS partition) and then created new partitions in the space I created using plain old fdisk; it was just as easy (well, I thought it was easy anyway) ;-)
Edit: On a different note, I love the 1920x1080 panel on my laptop and I struggle to use the lower resolution displays now.
Last edited by Hodor; 12-02-2013 at 09:14 PM.
Note that windows comes with Disk management that also allows you to shrink partitions.
Which fails to work if the disk has a gpt scheme(tried in win7, no idea about win8), or if the partitions you need to manipulate are not supported by Windows.
I agree with Yarin about installing different OS`s in different disks instead of partitions.
In my desktop, I have a 120gig SSD that is formatted to btrfs and has gummiboot to boot the Linux kernel directly.
Trying to get Windows cooperating with that turned out to be impossible.
So, making an NTFS partition on another disk was the easiest way out.
This makes no sense.
Each partition can have a different filesystem - it makes absolutely no difference. The only problem is the bootloader. Windows won't boot anything non-Windows. Having multiple hard drives won't solve this problem in any way. Using a Linux bootloader can fix that problem, however. So I fail to understand the problem with partition here that multiple hard drives can solve?
Also, yes, Windows partition tools suck: you are better off with 3rd party tools. Easeus has a free partitioning tool for Windows that's good.
As for multiple hard drives, it is possible to get an external hard drive. Most modern BIOSes support booting from USB.