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How to Dual-Boot Windows 10 and Ubuntu 18.04, 18.10, 19.04 & 19.10

admin by admin
February 21, 2020
in Lập Trình Linux
50
How to Dual-Boot Windows 10 and Ubuntu 18.04, 18.10, 19.04 & 19.10



A brand new updated tutorial for 2019 which shows you how to dual-boot Windows 10 and Ubuntu 18.04, 18.10, 19.04 & 19.10 in a simple step-by-step, easy to follow format.

Disable Fast Startup:
Ubuntu:
Rufus:
How to create a bootable USB:

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How to Dual-Boot Windows 10 and Ubuntu 18.04, 18.10, 19.04 & 19.10

Nguồn:https://ftlinuxcourse.com/

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Comments 50

  1. JaydenCarlinePlayZ says:
    2 years ago

    The plus doesn’t appear

    Reply
  2. Bruh Moment says:
    2 years ago

    This gotta be a world record time for a tutorial to get into the video and not talk constantly.
    Good job 🙂

    Reply
  3. nobbieesheepSV says:
    2 years ago

    The installation is stuck on "detecting file system 100%" and it wont go from there on.
    Oh and i was installing Kubuntu

    Reply
  4. Zach Ball says:
    2 years ago

    Couldn't log in after installation because graphics drivers weren't installed. Had to open cli and ran 'sudo ubuntu-drivers autoinstall', then restarted which fixed it

    Reply
  5. Mona Simiari says:
    2 years ago

    Damn! I had forgotten to disable fast-boot on windows 10! So grub didn't work for me

    Reply
  6. Syny_Aspect says:
    2 years ago

    I have 44.83 GB of free space, but when I right 20000, 20 GB, it says that "Total size after shrink in MB: 0"

    Reply
  7. Chris Thompson says:
    2 years ago

    So you have to start this process on the computer you want to have dual boot capabilities, after you've already installed windows, yeah?

    Reply
  8. Harry P says:
    2 years ago

    my grub menu doesnt show up… boots right into ubuntu… how can i fix?

    Reply
  9. Joyful Eevee says:
    2 years ago

    I got lucky and the install alongside windows 10 appeared, I can tell it was much harder with something else.

    Reply
  10. TheCheezieDip says:
    2 years ago

    I can't select the allocated space at the installation phase. It says that it's unusable. Can someone help me out, please?

    Reply
  11. Ricfilalma says:
    2 years ago

    How didnt you get the EFI error? I got it and i dont know what to do

    Reply
  12. Sofiene Litayem says:
    2 years ago

    I was obliged to decrease the speed of the video to understand what you are saying… speedy man 😉

    Reply
  13. Jade says:
    2 years ago

    Thank you so much
    Excellent tutorial

    Reply
  14. Zmkan Zmkan says:
    2 years ago

    For those who see black screen, this solution worked for me
    https://itsfoss.com/fix-ubuntu-freezing/

    Reply
  15. Hutchyy says:
    2 years ago

    Nice tutorial, no waffle and nice pace

    Reply
  16. Abhishek Banerjee says:
    2 years ago

    Love the tutorial man!

    Reply
  17. Nocturnal Analasys says:
    2 years ago

    Can I use the USB as a disk partition

    Reply
  18. GGaben says:
    2 years ago

    Can we use kubuntu?

    Reply
  19. Hike Yegiyan says:
    2 years ago

    I've tried everything, but it keeps booting to Windows 10 instead of grub :/

    Reply
  20. Xalifa brindar says:
    2 years ago

    Thank you sooo muchh

    Reply
  21. The Vibrant Gaze says:
    2 years ago

    Is it important to turn off Fast startup? if i turn off this option then will hibernate function work? because
    i use my power button of laptop to hibernate it…

    Reply
  22. Abhishek Pokhrel says:
    2 years ago

    Is it mandatory to free some space before installing it? Because, as I know, Ubuntu installation gives you an option to install ubuntu alongside windows right!!

    Reply
  23. Rocky Railgun says:
    2 years ago

    You actually multiply by 1024 to get the GBs you want

    Reply
  24. SUMIT KUMAR says:
    2 years ago

    when i am opening ubuntu my laptop is getting switch off.

    Reply
  25. takibacsi85 says:
    2 years ago

    That's it? …😶

    Reply
  26. rebecca says:
    2 years ago

    do a video on tri booting windows 7 windows 10 and a Debian based Linux distro

    Reply
  27. Omar Placeres says:
    2 years ago

    I have a problem. When I was installing ubuntu the system didn't see my windows 10. Now I can't start windows 10 anymore unless I make a boot repair and then I can start windows but it cannot see ubuntu. What should I do? Thanks.

    Reply
  28. Random Person says:
    2 years ago

    SOLVED!!!
    I had a few issues that I eventually solved and wanted to share in case someone else also has these problems..

    1.) PROBLEM: Windows wont allow you to shrink the partition small enough even though you have LOTS of available hard drive space.

    SOLUTION: After trying all the common things suggested on the web without success I finally just used a 3rd party partitioning software (Aomei) to create the new partition. Then merge it back into the C:/ drive. Now windows will see that extra space as available (minus the obligatory 20gb Windows reserves for special stuff). You'll want to use the Windows Shrink tool because it leaves the space as "unallocated". If you format the space as NTFS or FAT32 before running the Ubuntu install, you'll run into problems. Just make sure it says "unallocated" before running the Ubuntu boot drive.

    2.) PROBLEM: Windows either doesnt show your USB boot disk in the BIOS as something bootable or it sees it and Windows ignores it completely upon bootup.

    SOLUTION: At first I was using "Universal USB Installer" to create my bootable USB drive. Everything looked great but Windows would ignore the USB drive upon bootup. I downloaded and used "RUFUS" which then created a bootable USB that was recognized my Windows at startup without issue. My guess is that the universal usb installer was choosing specific parameters automatically that were not correct. Rufus allows the user to change/select all the various parameters manually.

    3.) PROBLEM: You finished installing Ubuntu but you're not seeing the GRUB menu when booting up.

    SOLUTION: When I was setting up the "swap area" and " ext4 / " partitions in the Ubuntu install wizard, I mistakenly selected the newly created "ext4 /" partition as the place I wanted Ubuntu installed to. If you look closely at 6:32, he has the root folder selected. In his case this shows "ATA VBOX harddisk 128.8gb" in the bottom field. When repeating the install process I made sure to have the root folder selected and everything worked flawlessly. I was able to boot into GRUB directly after the install.

    4.) PROBLEM: After entering your login password, instead of logging you in and showing the desktop you are shown a blank screen.
    SOLUTUON:
    Your video drivers for Linux need to be updated…
    – Manually reboot the computer by holding the power button until it shuts down. Boot into the GRUB menu but when you get there type "e" which will show you the setup parameters for Ubuntu. Use the arrow keys to navigate to the 2nd to last line where it says "$vt_handoff". Directly after that you will add a space and a few words. When finished it should read…."$vt_handoff nouveau.modeset=0"

    – Press F-10 which will boot directly into Ubuntu with the newly edited parameters. This should get you to your desktop.

    – Now you need to download updates so this problem doesnt happen again the next time you boot up. Type Ctrl-Alt-T to open the terminal. Now type "sudo apt update" at the prompt and hit enter. Make sure you have an internet connection because this will begin searching and downloading updates. This process takes about 6-10min.

    – A popup window may appear asking if you want to install the updates you just downloaded. If you dont see the popup you'll need to navigate around until you find the "software updater". I recommend doing this over WiFi as it seems to download more stuff. This install process took about 40min for me over 4G mobile….Much longer than expected but it got the job done. When the install is finished it will ask if You want to restart the computer. If everything went according to plan you shouldnt have the blank screen issue anymore as your video drivers will have been updated during this process.

    Reply
  29. Rouane Abdelkrim says:
    2 years ago

    I ckliked on unusable which is 116799MB but the + boutn isn't activated so I can't do the partition why is that help plz

    Reply
  30. Adhiraj Ghosh says:
    2 years ago

    I have 128 GB and 1TB HDD in my laptop. Can I partition storage space in my D drive instead of my SSD?

    Reply
  31. unknown world says:
    2 years ago

    Everything is good. understand almost every stem in the tut! <3
    But now i'm migrating from Windows to Linux. Yes i saw some suggestions at choosing linux mint/zorin os/etc as a first step in linux, but i want directly install ubuntu, because yeah, it is #1 distro (public) with support and compatibility.

    But i didn't get that part about swap, I have a total of 4 GB Ram (ddr3) and i want to *install* ubuntu 19.10 on my Pentium III 2 core pc.

    If i want to allocate space for swap area, i should put in : 4000 x 1 = 4000 MB / 4000 x1.5 = 6000 MB / 4000 x 2 = 8000 MB ?

    Reply
  32. Bullet Club Game & Tech says:
    2 years ago

    i love how u quickly started and finished the tutorial

    Reply
  33. Matrix 007 says:
    2 years ago

    Windows 10 with NTFS partition and Ubuntu not getting boot after installation, please help!!!

    Reply
  34. G Legar says:
    2 years ago

    Is this the way to install any distributions?
    And what if later on I want to delete the windows and use only Linux? How can I delete the windows?

    Reply
  35. Ankith Surendran says:
    2 years ago

    Says no EFI partition was found

    Reply
  36. Bagus Edhi says:
    2 years ago

    we must shrink C drive or another can be shrink?

    Reply
  37. Alex Ball says:
    2 years ago

    Can you also do this with other linux operating systems

    Reply
  38. Brandon Schneider says:
    2 years ago

    On some computers:
    Settings > Update & Security > Recovery > Restart Now under Advanced Startup > Use a Device > The USB device

    Reply
  39. Kodwo Bright says:
    2 years ago

    Thanks worked perfectly. No issues

    Reply
  40. AlphaBeatProductions says:
    2 years ago

    My installer froze at 5:40

    Reply
  41. henri eugène Bitoulefock says:
    2 years ago

    thank

    Reply
  42. Steve says:
    2 years ago

    do I need to always have the usb in or just for the first time?

    Reply
  43. Kwitz King says:
    2 years ago

    Somehow deleted my windows and my computers will only boot into Ubuntu…

    Reply
  44. Lij Davance says:
    2 years ago

    What if the Grub Boot loader doesn't show up?

    Reply
  45. Johnston Liu says:
    2 years ago

    What usb drives do you recommend for this?

    Reply
  46. motor bike says:
    2 years ago

    wow its really helpful

    Reply
  47. HACKKER says:
    2 years ago

    This is what for I need linux
    https://youtu.be/r7IVm9FtFtQ

    Reply
  48. Fernandokan says:
    2 years ago

    and how to i delete it after i dont want it anymore ??

    Reply
  49. SuperJumpBros says:
    2 years ago

    I got stuck at the "F??" key. I cant figure out which one!!
    Edit: It was the esc key..,

    Reply
  50. JakeFrom98 says:
    2 years ago

    Just realized why Ubuntu couldn't tell Windows was installed already its because I've encrypted my drive with Bitlocker. If I temporarily disabled it would Ubuntu have read it? It's too late now since im already installing im just wondering.

    Reply

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