Gamingphreek
Lifer
I just got finished installing Archlinux on my computer with only the features that I want (Thus it took quite a while to make sure thats all that was making it on there)
I need Windows installed for basic office productivity stuff and some other random things that aren't the greatest in Linux.
I, for some unknown reason, let Archlinux setup my partition table. Thus, I have a separate directory for /boot, /home, /, and swap.
Since I have reached the limit for Primary partitions, I would now have to install Windows onto a logical partition. From what I remember it does not like doing this at all.
Furthermore, I also remember that Windows, without asking, erases my bootloader. Is there anyway to prevent that from happening? Perhaps locking the partition so Windows fails when it tries?
Finally, everything (and I mean everything) feels snappier on Archlinux compared to my previous Ubuntu installs. Flash is running very smoothly, desktop compositing is running smoothly - what is it with Debian based *nix that causes these to run so slowly?
(Note: Running intel x3100 graphics card with full Kernel Modesetting enabled)
Thanks,
-Kevin
I need Windows installed for basic office productivity stuff and some other random things that aren't the greatest in Linux.
I, for some unknown reason, let Archlinux setup my partition table. Thus, I have a separate directory for /boot, /home, /, and swap.
Since I have reached the limit for Primary partitions, I would now have to install Windows onto a logical partition. From what I remember it does not like doing this at all.
Furthermore, I also remember that Windows, without asking, erases my bootloader. Is there anyway to prevent that from happening? Perhaps locking the partition so Windows fails when it tries?
Finally, everything (and I mean everything) feels snappier on Archlinux compared to my previous Ubuntu installs. Flash is running very smoothly, desktop compositing is running smoothly - what is it with Debian based *nix that causes these to run so slowly?
(Note: Running intel x3100 graphics card with full Kernel Modesetting enabled)
Thanks,
-Kevin