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www.tumfatig.net | ||
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www.everydaylinuxuser.com
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| | | | This guide shows how to dual boot WIndows 10 and Ubuntu on a computer with a standard BIOS | |
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poolp.org
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| | | | TL;DR: I run several "dedibox" servers at online.net, all powered by OpenBSD. OpenBSD is not officially supported so you have to work-around. Running full-disk encrypted OpenBSD there is a piece of cake. | |
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www.henryleach.com
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| | | | Five years ago I revived an old HP Stream 11 as a simple travel laptop with Debian Linux. That install is now pretty old, and the laptop's pitiful 2GB of RAM struggles more and more with websites; so it's time for a refresh. Instead of just installing another Linux distribution I thought I'd try something a little different. Since it's #OctOpenBsd, and I have to admit that I've been BSD-curious for a while, this is a good excuse to give OpenBSD a try. | |
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willhaley.com
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| | You can use these instructions to create a bootable USB drive with GRUB that can run the Windows 10 installer. I used Arch Linux to prepare my USB device, but any Linux variant like Debian or Ubuntu should work. I am assuming you have an appropriately large USB disk at /dev/sdz that you can completely erase for this process. Unmount the USB drive if mounted. sudo umount /dev/sdz* Wipe all partitions from the USB device. |