Knowing Christopher's sense of humour and his cheerful chatter ‘Stanley the knife' 'Mr Scissors' and 'Michael The Screwdriver' I think it’s fully intentional. I somehow think that in the classes he teaches and his talks he does that he has everyone’s full attention.
For dual boot on separate hard drives, you don't need to select at BIOS level. Install Windows and it's bootloader on one, and Linux with GRUB on the other, and create a chainload entry in GRUB to load Windows. Doing this means that the chances of a corrupt bootloader are about the same as the chance of a corrupt bootloader on a single OS system.
Stephen, that's a good tip you give. You can also not use the GRUB menu at all and select OS by your BIOS select boot drive key. Saves some seconds by not displaying the GRUB menu if loading the default OS. E.g. at home i usually boot to Mint. Power on and don't touch anything. If i want Windows, after power on i press the BIOS boot drive selection key (usually F11, F12 or F9) and select my Windows disk. About dual boot on a single drive: The Boot Repair tool in Mint saved me a couple of times. And another case: if you removed your Linux partitions and you can't also boot Windows as a consequence, then you boot WIndows install media, click repair your computer, then command prompt and then you issue various bootrec commands
Basically, the rule is that Windows will NOT respect the bootloaders and partitions of other operating systems. Heck, they're so childish about this, they refuse to even name and identify non-Windows partitions - it won't say "Linux" or "Linux swap" (even though all such partitions fully identify themselves in a standard way and there's no excuse for Windows tools not to just look up the "type" of the partition from the well-known type numbers and report what's actually on there), but Windows tools will, at best, lie by saying "unknown" and, at worst, mislead by suggesting "unformatted / corrupt", when there's nothing whatsoever wrong with it. Due to this childishness, on a dual boot system, you should install Windows first and then install Linux second. Because Windows acts like it owns the place and it will just blindly overwrite the bootsector - which likely has something like GRUB on it from installing Linux first - with its own bootloader. it will utterly disregard whatever's on it and overwrite it. Yes, Windows causes the corruption and it's very much doing it purposefully, as there's really no excuse for this. Partitions clearly identify themselves and Windows DOES perform checks on the bootsector to detect previous versions of Windows. They could so easily bundle in extra checks for other known operating systems and ask "are you sure?". So, yeah, you install Windows first, then Linux second. Because Linux will respect Windows and not trash its bootloader. But the reverse is not the same. Windows will blindly kill anything that's not a Windows bootloader and install its own bootloader over the top of it. Furthermore, Windows Updates to the bootloader? This could potentially trigger it to do it later. So, yeah, install Windows and Linux on separate hard drives and make sure that GRUB is on the Linux drive. Windows at least respects not trashing things on some other hard drive (at least currently). And then boot by default to the GRUB / Linux drive, which'll also provide a menu entry to boot into Windows. (The complaint that this means you're dependent on the GRUB drive to boot into Windows isn't really true. Most BIOSes / UEFIs provide a "boot menu" - pressing F11 or F12 or whatever - and you can specify booting into the Windows drive directly or set it as the default boot drive from there.) It's Windows causing the "corruption". Let's be 100% clear on that. (Provably so. Install a dual boot system - Windows first, Linux second - and then, well, never boot into Windows at any point. Nothing will ever go wrong, as Windows is never given the chance to corrupt things. You can empirically prove this to yourself. Although, I do know directly - from dealing with disks and bootsectors and such - that Windows is doing this and it's the sole cause of the problems. But Microsoft is very good at FUD - fear, uncertainty, doubt - and casting aspersions that maybe Linux is at fault. Maybe. Look, these Windows' tools are saying "unformatted / corrupt". Which is just a lie, by the way. Heck, most Linux distros ship with NTFS filesystem drivers. Linux can read Windows partitions without any problem. It totally knows what's on that drive, so it wouldn't corrupt it, even if it was writing to that drive - which it absolutely 100% wouldn't do for any reason, unless the user initiated an action telling it to do so.)
Thanks, Chris - this video has boosted my confidence with respect to ditching Windows and adopting Linux as my full time OS. Look forward to future videos on the subject.
Good man Dave! I'm 65 and I started to learn 2 years ago on an old computer that I didn't mind breaking. You can make the learning curve as steep or as shallow as you want it to be. I treat learning as a hobby to keep my mind active.
@@truthislam6481 That's good to hear - I'm 67 and have been in electronics all my adult life, used Windows since 3.1. As long as I can get Linux to operate my external monitors then it'll all be good! I'm going to set up Linux on an oldish laptop first and see what happens. The Windows 11 systems requirements are what finally decided my new course of action - even my 5 year old Lenovo does not qualify! 😖 Thanks for your comment.
It took me a while to figure out how to get my printer to work with Linux. That would be great for another episode. I’m sure others are having the same problem.
I was worried I'd run into a problem with my wireless printer but Ubuntu found it with no issues or installing on my part. Was definitely a load off my mind.
Top three slots were filled just when I got the notification. Wow !! BTW, this video series is great for someone who's planning to migrate to Linux from windows and still want the windows programs support.
You are such a great trainer and I always go away knowing more about things than I did before. I plan on obtaining an external SSD drive bay now so I can swap into Windows when I need to for work while using Linux and testing Proton for the Steam games I play. Thanks!
I use a Windows 10 computer for my business, it is always on and I restart it every evening. I built this PC last year using a Ryzen 5 and 16 GB of memory. All the drives are SSD's. My primary computer (the one I use the most) is a Lenovo V570 laptop from 2013 running Ubuntu 20.04. I can connect to my Windows PC from anywhere using RealVNC, even from my smart phone. This is the system that works best for my business and personal computing. I need to learn W11 (for my business) and your VirtualBox registry hack has me thinking that it will be one of my Winter projects, after I get all these leafs to the curb. Speaking of which, it's time for me to turn off my laptop and grab a rake and leaf blower. Great video and thanks for keeping the content interesting.
The advice to try out open source programs on windows before switching is so good and now I wonder why I never thought of getting people to do that before!
15:18 Local accounts can be created in Home Edition, simply by tricking the installer by disconnecting your VM from the Internet right when it asks for your Microsoft account. Or, you can use Pro Edition as you have done in this video.
I am surprised to hear this, as I have tried repeatedly to create a local account in the Windows 11 Home edition by disconnecting as you, and always on installation reboots it requires an account to be created before it will complete (unlike in Windows 10, where this indeed words). Being online is, after all, a requirement of Home installation. But I can believe there are hacks!
Chris, that long-nosed bunny is some serious nightmare fuel! 😱 All kidding apart, excellent video, as always. As a long-time Linux user, I sometimes feel that my preferred platform doesn't get the credit it deserves but thanks to this series, I am confident that many will find switching far less daunting than they might have imagined
Listening to another channel's videos I realize one of the reason yours are so much better is because they are so much better written and so well thought out. I've become allergic to unscripted videos.
Excellent promotion of Linux, 10 years ago I moved over from Windows and have never looked back. Though the thought of using Windows within Linux (Wine or VM) has always concerned me - security, I don't want to be bombarded by the malware associated with Windows! All the best, Beamer.
Not looking back is the key to moving forward. People who try to run Linux with excess Windows baggage struggle. I watched this video because it is something I know almost nothing about. I've run Wine a couple times briefly. Been running Linux for 26 years now.
@@1pcfred 26 years that must be a record? *Congratulations* Whilst Linux is now fairly easy, in the past, it could be a tad tricky. For me, that manifested itself in printer, scanner and WiFi areas. Today, most of my engagement and communication is online, but Linux still seems to have some issues with Bluetooth. As the mantra goes: Don't complain - get involved with the solution :) All the best, Beamer.
@@beamer.electronics I run into a lot of people that have been running Linux longer than me. OK maybe not a lot but a fair number. I am in the under 200K club though. Less than 200,000 had run Linux before I started running it. I never tried Bluetooth out. I have done Wi-Fi a couple times. Stuff does seem complicated from the get go. Getting my modem to work back in the day was no easy feat. I found a ncurses utility that helped me generate the required scripts. ppp-setup. Or something. Was a long time ago. I still remember the initialization string. AT&F1 That was the magic that made my modem work.
I recently switched my entire workflow from windows to linux and a series like this would have saved me tons of time and googling. Really looking forward to more videos on this topic!
Wonderful useful video as usual Prof. Yes using VMs has become my preferred way of sampling different OSes without any stress, it helps a lot with learning as you don't worry about breaking the system especially if you fully clone the original VM install so that you can just copy and mess around again without worries of re-installing.
One beauty of Linux is if you like how things were you can keep stuff that way. Linux is so customizable you have the option of using stuff as old as dirt if you want to. Some do too. I do myself. I know others who also use really ancient software on Linux. There's new stuff but the old stuff lingers. Some code just needs some porting to build today. It's different than the Windows world.
I’m a long time PC user, from the IBM PC XT and IBM DOS 2.1 to Windows server 2012. I’ve been aware of Linux since I learned IPv4. I’m retired from the MIS world. I have years old laptops that I know will be useful with the correct linux distro and software. I found your channel at just the right time. Very well presented information. Subscribed and feeding the algorithms.
First-28 Love those episodes about Linux. I’ve implemented this OS in my life since I started watching this channel about 6 years ago when I bought my first Raspberry Pi. Good stuff as always.
Always a good day when ExplainingComputers drops a new video! Especially because I switched to Linux a couple of weeks ago and need a survival guide lol
What a fantastic and informative video. And what a useful list of references in the description too. On the downside, I notice that 3D Train Studio remained installed on the LM machine, so if Mr Barnatt disappears off the scene for a couple of weeks or even months, don't panic.
Another fantastic video Chris. I currently run several Linux distros in VMs on my Win PC, thanks to your videos, it makes my learning cure toward Linux so much more accessible.
Excellent video - explains well the methods and advantages of running Windows software inside Linux operating systems using Virtualbox. Users need to be made aware that the reverse can also apply - Linux operating systems can also be run in Windows 10, etc. again using the same Virtualbox method. It's an ideal way to try out a Linux 'distro' (or two) from inside the safety of a Windows machine, if users are still unsure about taking the plunge into the world of Linux........
So many yt channels deal with the exotic and the arcane, which is fine, but where Chris shines is in the bread and butter stuff: simple basic things but explained VERY well. This is professional grade training from a gifted teacher and it hasn’t cost us a penny. Thanks for all the time you put into this Chris.
As a long time windows user, I have been afraid to make the jump to Linux. This video is exactly what I needed to explain options of switching over & dual OS's in the same box. Huge thanks.
Your fear is justified. Linux is a lot different than Windows. Most cannot make the transition. The ones that can are the ones that can let go and embrace Linux for what it is. If you can't do that then forget about it. I tell people you gotta wanna. Linux will test your commitment often too. Yesterday I wanted to compile some software and the configurator was giving me a hard time. I couldn't figure out what it was complaining about. So I just commented out a section of its checks. Because they dealt with versions of a compiler that I don't use. It worked but it still gave me a moment of pause and doubt. Wasn't smooth sailing, you know?
On most Linux distros ,merely highlighting a line of text copies it to the clipboard , no Ctrl + C or right click menu required. Likewise, a mouse middle click pastes the copied text.
@@paulg3336 I think it is a X Window thing really. There's actually a daemon that works that way in the console too. It is called gpm. All distros do is package software up. Well, they screw with it a bit too sometimes.
Everything I’ve read about security on Linux seems to suggest that it is very secure. Of course, never opening a browser or an email, or any other app that has or can receive messages from the world outside the local network is also a very secure methodology. But…. Having said all that, security is somewhat a mystery inside Linux, at least to me. Would appreciate your excellent dissertation on the subject and any insight as to how secure Linux really is. Thanks.
love the diction and pacing of your videos. it's almost therapeautic. i'm always learning one thing or another from every upload even as an "IT guy". thanks for your service to the public!
As i said before explaining computers is the best educational videos on computer technology, this is the best place To learn,Christopher’s explains in a manner that’s easy to follow and understand,👍
After watching and reading some of the other operating systems out there, I just really want to learn more about them, and these videos are doing an amazing job at it.
what an amazing content! Thanks Chris! While I already knew most things I still learnt something and you style of presentation is unmatched on youtube. One of the few channells among the 60 I am subscribed to that has "all notifications" enabled
Thanks for the clear gimickless video. I have personal experience of Windows corrupting a Bootcamp partition on my Mac. Without warning could not get the Mac to boot. Luckily I have a good Apple repair centre who sorted me out (had to reformat the hard drive!!) I have the following setup now, very old PC running WindowsXP (not online), a newer PC for Windows 10, Mac for most of my work, and a really old Laptop running Linux Mint! Moral of the story don't throw away old computers!
Awesome episode. Although I have been using Debian for years at home, I always pick up helpful information from your episodes. Again, great series, and I hope more viewers open their eyes get away from expensive and proprietary software, and finally become part of the greater community that has made the transition. Cheers.
Those installation rabbit holes are sufficiently contorted that keeping a trail of breadcrumbs (or roll of wool, if you're a classicist) in the form of copious notes is pretty well mandatory. Even if you don't have to retreat a step or two occasionally, it must be easy to forget which stage you've reached.
I agree it's the only way to go. The most important thing to do first is defrag the windows hard drive then backup everything. I watched quite a lot of UA-cam vids & took copious notes of how to install the system safely, use of the various terminal commands (nothing to be scared of) & how to repair grub using a live ISO and the terminal. I did several dry runs using the live disk before switching to a dual boot system (Linux Mint 17.3 & W7). I've never looked back
Keeping detailed notes was a technique I discovered for myself very early on. Trying to juggle everything in the mind may seem possible and perhaps it even is. But why make things harder than they need to be? Then if I ever need to refer back to what I've done computers are better at remembering than I am.
You make the world a better place💐 @ Dual boot: ...One learns a lot about Grub, boot-loaders and Windows recovery...🙄 A solution I had good experiences with was keeping the old pc when I bought a new one and running the old with Linux! I was able to extend the use of an old system for 10 years! One reason I was able to do this was a ...certain computer explaining channel that informed me about dystros that cater to old hardware! 😉
Having suffered a number dual boot issues/corruptions long ago, I once opted to run 2 separate PC's with one for working and one for entertainment. A costly solution indeed, but it really was the best option. The detachment was perfect and ensured my focus was optimal. I need to repurpose an older machine for a deep dive into Linux as I don't want the hassle of dual boot issues.
I've just retired from a career in IT, starting on IBM's System 370 in the 70's. It's horrifying to see how the desire of vendors to keep control has made home use more and more complex. Despite opportunity geekdom has meant that we're still dealing with complex commands, multiple incompatibilities. Finicky and crappy languages that have much more complex errors than assembler or COBOL. Rant over. Thanks for persuading me that despite using Linux servers and windows workstations for the last couple of decades, there is no hope of practical simplicity. I need the easy way out, I don't want to waste the time I have left fighting with this nonsense any more. I no longer get paid for it. Now, can I do all I need on a simple tablet? Probably. Frankly it's insane.
Yes, it's easy to get tired from this type of sh*t, when you work in the field. E.g. when Windows Update, which is supposed to make things better, breaks printing and you have to fix this on a number of clients' computers
Hail Technical Brother! My career began in the 70s as well (writing COBOL for a DEC PDP8E) and I agree: I want the simplest practical solutions I can get on lightweight hardware.
You cannot blame vendors if their customers constantly demand more complex technology. Everyone wants to live large and too much is never enough. Now if you can manage to get by with less yourself then you can manage to keep things relatively simple I suppose. Good luck finding your balance in retirement.
@@1pcfred Just one example. I saw a lot of po reassure from fashion freaks to constantly change languages used for development. Each switch increased development and maintenance costs due to longer development times caused by immature languages, obscure errors which should have been trapped at compiler, later IDE stage. Multi language installations meaning staff became generalists and dealing with errors took longer. Dumb customers was a big part of the problem, I agree. IBM used to say expect 8 lines of code per programmer per day. Those 8 lines could do a lot. Now it's barely a function call. Net result was my guys spending three times as long as they did ten years earlier to develop equivalents with each language change.
@@kevgermany I think I know what you're talking about. Change for change sake. Playing Devil's advocate we still don't know what we're doing at the dawn of the Information Age yet. As sophisticated as things may seem now we're really just getting started. There's plenty of evolution yet to come.
This is a very interesting series. Perhaps the most unknown aspect of Linux is its level of security. I believe there are programs that can monitor or improve Linux security but which produce long complex logs that I probably wouldn't understand so an intro to maintaining and improving security at a basic level would be very useful. I have previously used your video on installing Virtual Box to run office 365 and it works perfectly.
Clear, concise and complete as usual. I've been playing around with ARM distros for my Raspberry Pi 400 and have been seeing some interesting choices. I'm interested in using WINE on the ARM platform.
Another great video Chris! Abstraction rules! Something I’ve noticed is that any application or OS, through ongoing use, trains us to accept its own particular ways as normal. Use it and in time it becomes intuitive, but this is different from instinctive. By using Windows, Linux and MacOS regularly it is possible to become quite multi-lingual, which seems to enhance the experience of them all. I’d love to see a video on ‘abstraction’, and how it so totally (and helpfully) creates an illusion that there is more here than zeros and ones. BSD and Linux are so close that the differences are more like local accents than different species. The abstraction fools us so helpfully.
Thank you, Mr. Barnatt. 🙏🏼 I'm thrilled to know that all those options exist, and very impressed by Linux' flexibility in particular. I have it in mind to maintain separate, dedicated Windows and Linux platforms (I have desk space for each, and more than enough components lying around to build the latter), but the ability to set up *virtual machines* in Linux is simply brilliant. Quite a 'Nice to Have' option in case I ever need it. _On to the next video!_ 👍🏼
This is great info for the newcomer. I'm a long time linux users, as long as is possible actually. But always had to keep a dual boot or a separate Windows machine to run Windows software. But happily I'm almost free of such software outside of work, and they have provided me with a laptop specifically for work. So my personal machines for the first time can be all Linux. My kids play games so they will stick with Windows for the foreseeable future. Until Linux becomes accepted by the game developer industry anyway.
A thoroughly interesting video from Chris at EC, I learn something new every Sunday! I think that security for the next video in this series is important, running windows software in wine does come with it's risks, not to say that Linux is a 100% secure it's not. Maybe another video about running a VM using pass through in quemu KVM where it can access the GPU for better performance in video/photo editing or for games, maybe in the pipeline? :)
Best way to enjoy both operating systems is keeping Windows on your main laptop and buy a second laptop (lower in specs, could be second hand) for Linux.
Thanks a bunch for these videos. They really help with my understanding of Linux. I learn something from every video of yours, even if I feel I know a subject you cover. Keep up the great work!
Thank you for another great video! I'm actually trying to get my work pc setup to run linux with windows on a virtual machine recently, so this helps a lot. I would like to see a video on networking. In particular, how to connect with RDP and shared network folders between Linux and windows pc's on a local network. Thanks again. Take care
Thanks Christopher, interesting video. I declare I am solely using Linux everyday, I'll continue to use virtual machines for installing Windoz when I really have to!
Yet another exceptional guide, Chris, and as a recent adopter of Linux for my daily computing I'm sure I'm going to run into a Windows-need at some point and this is where I'll turn for help. ... However, I found myself considerably distracted once you showed off 3D Train Studio. I'm not even a model train guy (though I'm growing to appreciate them as well as real trains via a LOT of UK tv series devoted to them) but I immediately needed to look this up and see if I can get it running on my laptop!
I appreciate you and your channel enough to have referenced many of your topics to friends. In my mind, security trumps networking and all other topics.
Great video as usual from EC! I could never see any good reason for switching from Unix-type operating systems to DOS, and later Windows, so don't have that problem of switching to Linux with all its associated withdrawal symptoms. My recommendation for Windows users is to go cold-turkey, dump it entirely for Linux, then never look back. 🙂
Great Video! Love the series. My vote would be Network, then Security, then peripherals like printers. Running my duel boot daily driver and have had a few hung boots. Haven't yet made a VM of Windows in Linux yet, and I think you have just given me the inspiration to take that next step. The XP VM is a great idea. Thanks again, for another great video.
This Linux series was a good idea and there's good stuff here. I'm sure I would have learned a lot from it it it was around when I switched to Linux. But I did okay anyway. I agree that the virtual-machine option is the way to go in more important applications and that's my plan for the one thing I have that needs Windows when the time comes. Much to my surprise, when I needed to set up a Zoom situation for a family member last year, I saw that they had a native Linux version available. I was expecting having to make it work either with WINE or a VM, so that made things a lot easier. Very smart on their part, in my opinion.
Very comprehensive! I've played with several of these options, but it's nice to see them set out side-by-side. My next system build will likely be Ubuntu with a Windows VM for backwards compatibility. I also agree 110% with your subtle dig on the MS Office "Ribbon". I hated it when it came out, and still do!!!!!!
I suppose for absolute completeness, you could have mentioned running your windows programs on a separate PC somewhere else in your house or office and accessing them via VNC or similar. This would give you the same experience as cloud windows, without the recurring expense (other than the cost of the extra PC). I have done this in the past with an old PC being able to run the programs from the convenience of my new laptop.
Yes, this is true -- another solution! And I thought about including the use of something like the LattePanda streaming cable (that interfaces a LattePanda SBC to a PC so that it can (eg) run Windows in a Window in Linux, but running on the LattePanda hardware. So many options! :)
Yes I do the same, that's how, in my case, I "expand" my 8GB RAM laptop with a 32GB RAM desktop running in another room on a second monitor just above the display of my laptop, while still using the great keyboard and trackpad of my laptop and having a multiple monitor setup
@@ExplainingComputers Streaming a WinPC via LPanda (as Digitalguy) or similar, to a laptop would indeed make a very interesting video. I'd like to chill with a light laptop - with the power of my desktop available - Bonus if there is a way to do that wirelessly (short range high bandwidth?)
Another very informative video Chris, I'm really pleased you are making this series especially considering the Windows 11 hardware compatibility situation. I'm more concerned with the security and printer compatibility situations but whatever order you want to tackle those subjects mentioned at the end of the video is fine by me. P.S. I've read a number of times that older HP printers have poor driver support in Linux compared to Windows, that might be a point to address during the future printing video.
I love that storage has become so cheap, fast, and small. I've used the Drive Swap Dual Boot method for over a decade, via an IcyDock four bay enclosure. It's really cool to use SSDs now much in the way I used floppies in the 80s. :)
Beginning @3:25 is IMO the very reason why a lot of Windows users are hesitant or fearful of migrating to Linux. Using the CLI for installing programs is something the average Windows user never has to do in order to install any program. Secondly, a Windows user does not need to choose what "Distro" they are using. Even having this option to download a program will be confusing to the a new Linux user. Thirdly, even if the new Linux user gets the program installed correctly, there a lot of Linux programs that do not place an Icon on the desktop not in the start menu and needs to be start from the CLI. I also believe that until Linux makes installing programs easier from GUI and makes programs uninstallable from GUI, Linux will not reach the mainstream like it should.
Great run through! You can also have a type 1 hypervisor on a separate PC and run all of your OSes on that at will. This can be a bit cumbersome and daunting for non-technical users (not IT Pros) as it requires a server and networking skills. But you would have, in essence, a dedicated computer for labs and other things that require using applications that suffer from vendor lock-in.
This was so mesmerizing that I failed to notice when I spilled my tea... (yes really!) What next? Networking in linux gives me fits. I've had so little success (and then inconsistently) that I gave up, and when I need to schlep files around my home network, I fire up the WinXP VM and it has no problem at all!
Sounds to me like you have poorly supported wi-fi hardware. That happens in Linux. Some can work with configuration and some is just problematic. The network stack in Linux tends to work well enough though. Otherwise the Internet wouldn't be running on Linux.
@@1pcfred Not using wifi. Wired network. This is just trying to access my shared Windows drives (they are numerous) without having to do something silly like copy the IP address from the router.
@@Reziac if you're using Windows as a server you're already doing something pretty silly. I have a file server but it runs NFS on Linux. I mount it using it's IP too. My share is just a directory. I don't use Windows at all so it's not a topic I am familiar with. Well, I know enough about Windows to avoid it.
👍👍👍👍👍Thank You, Christopher! Absolutely perfect timing... I am still maintaining Windows access via Virtualbox... just that Virtualbox is Great fun. VM snapshot is one great way to backup an unstable "OS" ;). Once a while, I might need to generate MS Office file to submit work; just fire-up my VM so to avoid font & formatting issue. And those time that need to use Webex... Upgraded from XP to Linux & happy & blissful eversince!
@@ExplainingComputers Totally agree‼️ That's Live-Migration... making cloud horizontal scaling a breath-taking wonder. Pushing data-cemtre network to adopt Mass-Scale coordinated Automation - Orchestration. So we have Super-Dancing-Network tt can flex according to business application needs. That also brings back some very fond memory when I did a Live snapshot whilst in the middle of "compiling" Linux-from-scratch, power down my VM & PC and leave home for work. Was so thrilled when everything just continued to compile properly from where it left off. That was on a Pentium586 PC.
Your videos are excellent, and I find the 1980s BBC presenting style most comforting, whether you do it intentionally or not!
Me too. Can't stand all those American hipsters full of clichés and waffle. Chris just gets on with it.
@@williamgiddings9636 Admittedly, the Belgian waffles are always better than the American sort.
Intentionally for sure! Ans I like it a lot 😀
Knowing Christopher's sense of humour and his cheerful chatter ‘Stanley the knife' 'Mr Scissors' and 'Michael The Screwdriver' I think it’s fully intentional. I somehow think that in the classes he teaches and his talks he does that he has everyone’s full attention.
@@williamgiddings9636 Don't forget about Canadian hipsters.
You my dear sir, are like a beacon of light in the darkness that is the "free" OS field.
:)
These kinds of current and broad descriptions of all the options for setting up Linux and windows are pure gold. Thank you!
When Anthony from Linus Tech Tips did not give us a Linux Guide, you are who we turn to! And good reason to too.
Thanks!
For dual boot on separate hard drives, you don't need to select at BIOS level. Install Windows and it's bootloader on one, and Linux with GRUB on the other, and create a chainload entry in GRUB to load Windows. Doing this means that the chances of a corrupt bootloader are about the same as the chance of a corrupt bootloader on a single OS system.
You dont have to do that the linux os will do all that for you. Just make sure you create an efi boot partition and install grub to that.
@@keibohow69 and if you remove this disk you can't boot Windows anymore.
Stephen, that's a good tip you give. You can also not use the GRUB menu at all and select OS by your BIOS select boot drive key. Saves some seconds by not displaying the GRUB menu if loading the default OS. E.g. at home i usually boot to Mint. Power on and don't touch anything. If i want Windows, after power on i press the BIOS boot drive selection key (usually F11, F12 or F9) and select my Windows disk. About dual boot on a single drive: The Boot Repair tool in Mint saved me a couple of times. And another case: if you removed your Linux partitions and you can't also boot Windows as a consequence, then you boot WIndows install media, click repair your computer, then command prompt and then you issue various bootrec commands
Basically, the rule is that Windows will NOT respect the bootloaders and partitions of other operating systems.
Heck, they're so childish about this, they refuse to even name and identify non-Windows partitions - it won't say "Linux" or "Linux swap" (even though all such partitions fully identify themselves in a standard way and there's no excuse for Windows tools not to just look up the "type" of the partition from the well-known type numbers and report what's actually on there), but Windows tools will, at best, lie by saying "unknown" and, at worst, mislead by suggesting "unformatted / corrupt", when there's nothing whatsoever wrong with it.
Due to this childishness, on a dual boot system, you should install Windows first and then install Linux second.
Because Windows acts like it owns the place and it will just blindly overwrite the bootsector - which likely has something like GRUB on it from installing Linux first - with its own bootloader. it will utterly disregard whatever's on it and overwrite it. Yes, Windows causes the corruption and it's very much doing it purposefully, as there's really no excuse for this.
Partitions clearly identify themselves and Windows DOES perform checks on the bootsector to detect previous versions of Windows. They could so easily bundle in extra checks for other known operating systems and ask "are you sure?".
So, yeah, you install Windows first, then Linux second. Because Linux will respect Windows and not trash its bootloader. But the reverse is not the same. Windows will blindly kill anything that's not a Windows bootloader and install its own bootloader over the top of it.
Furthermore, Windows Updates to the bootloader? This could potentially trigger it to do it later.
So, yeah, install Windows and Linux on separate hard drives and make sure that GRUB is on the Linux drive. Windows at least respects not trashing things on some other hard drive (at least currently). And then boot by default to the GRUB / Linux drive, which'll also provide a menu entry to boot into Windows.
(The complaint that this means you're dependent on the GRUB drive to boot into Windows isn't really true. Most BIOSes / UEFIs provide a "boot menu" - pressing F11 or F12 or whatever - and you can specify booting into the Windows drive directly or set it as the default boot drive from there.)
It's Windows causing the "corruption". Let's be 100% clear on that.
(Provably so. Install a dual boot system - Windows first, Linux second - and then, well, never boot into Windows at any point. Nothing will ever go wrong, as Windows is never given the chance to corrupt things. You can empirically prove this to yourself. Although, I do know directly - from dealing with disks and bootsectors and such - that Windows is doing this and it's the sole cause of the problems.
But Microsoft is very good at FUD - fear, uncertainty, doubt - and casting aspersions that maybe Linux is at fault. Maybe. Look, these Windows' tools are saying "unformatted / corrupt". Which is just a lie, by the way. Heck, most Linux distros ship with NTFS filesystem drivers. Linux can read Windows partitions without any problem. It totally knows what's on that drive, so it wouldn't corrupt it, even if it was writing to that drive - which it absolutely 100% wouldn't do for any reason, unless the user initiated an action telling it to do so.)
Been dual booting Manjaro and windows for a while like this. No problems at all, gave priority to Grub of course.
Thanks, Chris - this video has boosted my confidence with respect to ditching Windows and adopting Linux as my full time OS.
Look forward to future videos on the subject.
Good man Dave!
I'm 65 and I started to learn 2 years ago on an old computer that I didn't mind breaking.
You can make the learning curve as steep or as shallow as you want it to be.
I treat learning as a hobby to keep my mind active.
@@truthislam6481 That's good to hear - I'm 67 and have been in electronics all my adult life, used Windows since 3.1. As long as I can get Linux to operate my external monitors then it'll all be good! I'm going to set up Linux on an oldish laptop first and see what happens.
The Windows 11 systems requirements are what finally decided my new course of action - even my 5 year old Lenovo does not qualify! 😖
Thanks for your comment.
Good man, Dave ... Hope it's working out well for you!
It took me a while to figure out how to get my printer to work with Linux. That would be great for another episode. I’m sure others are having the same problem.
Thanks for this. I was thinking that a video on drivers and printing should probably come next, so this is useful feddback. :)
@@ExplainingComputers And scanners! can't get mine to admit scanners exist. SANE is crazy!
And zorin couldn't find my network adapter.
I was worried I'd run into a problem with my wireless printer but Ubuntu found it with no issues or installing on my part. Was definitely a load off my mind.
@@ExplainingComputers Yes Christopher, more Awesomness!
Top three slots were filled just when I got the notification. Wow !!
BTW, this video series is great for someone who's planning to migrate to Linux from windows and still want the windows programs support.
Gaming on Linux is moving in a really positive direction currently.
Been moving in positive direction when will it reach destination.
Steam Deck could be massive in this.
Own gaming, own the world.
Linux Cu*k
@@Ryochan7 anime profile picture
You are such a great trainer and I always go away knowing more about things than I did before. I plan on obtaining an external SSD drive bay now so I can swap into Windows when I need to for work while using Linux and testing Proton for the Steam games I play. Thanks!
Covering all the options is a breath of fresh air
Never tried a virtual machine before, but will have a go now thanks to your explanation, thank you
This video alone is enough to convince some of my friends to try learn Linux, very detailed and informative!
I use a Windows 10 computer for my business, it is always on and I restart it every evening. I built this PC last year using a Ryzen 5 and 16 GB of memory. All the drives are SSD's. My primary computer (the one I use the most) is a Lenovo V570 laptop from 2013 running Ubuntu 20.04. I can connect to my Windows PC from anywhere using RealVNC, even from my smart phone. This is the system that works best for my business and personal computing. I need to learn W11 (for my business) and your VirtualBox registry hack has me thinking that it will be one of my Winter projects, after I get all these leafs to the curb. Speaking of which, it's time for me to turn off my laptop and grab a rake and leaf blower. Great video and thanks for keeping the content interesting.
The advice to try out open source programs on windows before switching is so good and now I wonder why I never thought of getting people to do that before!
Brilliant video, thank you! In terms of what comes next in this series, my preference is: 1. Security. 2. Networking. 3. Printing.
By far the easiest to understand and to follow way of using WINE! Thanks a million.
15:18 Local accounts can be created in Home Edition, simply by tricking the installer by disconnecting your VM from the Internet right when it asks for your Microsoft account. Or, you can use Pro Edition as you have done in this video.
I am surprised to hear this, as I have tried repeatedly to create a local account in the Windows 11 Home edition by disconnecting as you, and always on installation reboots it requires an account to be created before it will complete (unlike in Windows 10, where this indeed words). Being online is, after all, a requirement of Home installation. But I can believe there are hacks!
Chris, that long-nosed bunny is some serious nightmare fuel! 😱 All kidding apart, excellent video, as always. As a long-time Linux user, I sometimes feel that my preferred platform doesn't get the credit it deserves but thanks to this series, I am confident that many will find switching far less daunting than they might have imagined
As we look to adapt old lab instruments to more modern computers, you give some very helpful ideas to try. Thanks!
Listening to another channel's videos I realize one of the reason yours are so much better is because they are so much better written and so well thought out. I've become allergic to unscripted videos.
:)
Excellent promotion of Linux, 10 years ago I moved over from Windows and have never looked back. Though the thought of using Windows within Linux (Wine or VM) has always concerned me - security, I don't want to be bombarded by the malware associated with Windows! All the best, Beamer.
Not looking back is the key to moving forward. People who try to run Linux with excess Windows baggage struggle. I watched this video because it is something I know almost nothing about. I've run Wine a couple times briefly. Been running Linux for 26 years now.
@@1pcfred 26 years that must be a record? *Congratulations* Whilst Linux is now fairly easy, in the past, it could be a tad tricky. For me, that manifested itself in printer, scanner and WiFi areas. Today, most of my engagement and communication is online, but Linux still seems to have some issues with Bluetooth. As the mantra goes: Don't complain - get involved with the solution :) All the best, Beamer.
@@beamer.electronics I run into a lot of people that have been running Linux longer than me. OK maybe not a lot but a fair number. I am in the under 200K club though. Less than 200,000 had run Linux before I started running it. I never tried Bluetooth out. I have done Wi-Fi a couple times. Stuff does seem complicated from the get go. Getting my modem to work back in the day was no easy feat. I found a ncurses utility that helped me generate the required scripts. ppp-setup. Or something. Was a long time ago. I still remember the initialization string. AT&F1 That was the magic that made my modem work.
I recently switched my entire workflow from windows to linux and a series like this would have saved me tons of time and googling. Really looking forward to more videos on this topic!
My preferred order for next episodes:
1- Security
2- Networking
3- Printing
Cheers Chris, great video as always!
Wonderful useful video as usual Prof. Yes using VMs has become my preferred way of sampling different OSes without any stress, it helps a lot with learning as you don't worry about breaking the system especially if you fully clone the original VM install so that you can just copy and mess around again without worries of re-installing.
I must be getting old, seeing that classic Office UI made me feel all fuzzy and warm for a moment.
One beauty of Linux is if you like how things were you can keep stuff that way. Linux is so customizable you have the option of using stuff as old as dirt if you want to. Some do too. I do myself. I know others who also use really ancient software on Linux. There's new stuff but the old stuff lingers. Some code just needs some porting to build today. It's different than the Windows world.
I’m a long time PC user, from the IBM PC XT and IBM DOS 2.1 to Windows server 2012. I’ve been aware of Linux since I learned IPv4. I’m retired from the MIS world. I have years old laptops that I know will be useful with the correct linux distro and software. I found your channel at just the right time. Very well presented information. Subscribed and feeding the algorithms.
First-28
Love those episodes about Linux. I’ve implemented this OS in my life since I started watching this channel about 6 years ago when I bought my first Raspberry Pi. Good stuff as always.
First 28 indeed! Another gold medal! :)
Always a good day when ExplainingComputers drops a new video! Especially because I switched to Linux a couple of weeks ago and need a survival guide lol
What a fantastic and informative video. And what a useful list of references in the description too.
On the downside, I notice that 3D Train Studio remained installed on the LM machine, so if Mr Barnatt disappears off the scene for a couple of weeks or even months, don't panic.
:)
Switched to Debian 11 from Windows 10 recently. Enjoying it a lot. Your videos have been a great help when I switched
Another fantastic video Chris. I currently run several Linux distros in VMs on my Win PC, thanks to your videos, it makes my learning cure toward Linux so much more accessible.
Excellent video - explains well the methods and advantages of running Windows software inside Linux operating systems using Virtualbox. Users need to be made aware that the reverse can also apply - Linux operating systems can also be run in Windows 10, etc. again using the same Virtualbox method. It's an ideal way to try out a Linux 'distro' (or two) from inside the safety of a Windows machine, if users are still unsure about taking the plunge into the world of Linux........
So many yt channels deal with the exotic and the arcane, which is fine, but where Chris shines is in the bread and butter stuff: simple basic things but explained VERY well. This is professional grade training from a gifted teacher and it hasn’t cost us a penny. Thanks for all the time you put into this Chris.
As a long time windows user, I have been afraid to make the jump to Linux. This video is exactly what I needed to explain options of switching over & dual OS's in the same box. Huge thanks.
Your fear is justified. Linux is a lot different than Windows. Most cannot make the transition. The ones that can are the ones that can let go and embrace Linux for what it is. If you can't do that then forget about it. I tell people you gotta wanna. Linux will test your commitment often too. Yesterday I wanted to compile some software and the configurator was giving me a hard time. I couldn't figure out what it was complaining about. So I just commented out a section of its checks. Because they dealt with versions of a compiler that I don't use. It worked but it still gave me a moment of pause and doubt. Wasn't smooth sailing, you know?
On most Linux distros ,merely highlighting a line of text copies it to the clipboard , no Ctrl + C or right click menu required.
Likewise, a mouse middle click pastes the copied text.
Most? I've never seen it any other way. That bit of the video did trouble me too.
@Betatroll you've lost control of your faculties.
@@1pcfred Me too but who knows what any one of the 300+ distros may do?
@@paulg3336 I think it is a X Window thing really. There's actually a daemon that works that way in the console too. It is called gpm. All distros do is package software up. Well, they screw with it a bit too sometimes.
Revisiting some of your videos as I try to bring a truly ancient laptop back to life! Many thanks as always.
Good luck! :)
Everything I’ve read about security on Linux seems to suggest that it is very secure. Of course, never opening a browser or an email, or any other app that has or can receive messages from the world outside the local network is also a very secure methodology. But…. Having said all that, security is somewhat a mystery inside Linux, at least to me. Would appreciate your excellent dissertation on the subject and any insight as to how secure Linux really is. Thanks.
Sir, I think that you are one of the greatest content creators out there.
Thank you for the great video.
love the diction and pacing of your videos. it's almost therapeautic. i'm always learning one thing or another from every upload even as an "IT guy". thanks for your service to the public!
I'm going to try Wine on my Gentoo.
I know I'm gonna love this series a lot. please keep up the amazing work!
Wine on gentoo ? You're a brave one. Good luck !
Cannot express how useful this video is for me. Very nice.
As i said before explaining computers is the best educational videos on computer technology, this is the best place To learn,Christopher’s explains in a manner that’s easy to follow and understand,👍
After watching and reading some of the other operating systems out there, I just really want to learn more about them, and these videos are doing an amazing job at it.
I dont really learn anyhting i dont know by listening to these videos. But your ability to explain and educate is so facinating! :D
21:52 without doubt, Windows is the best operating system {sharp intake of breath}... for running Windows applications {and relax -phew}
:)
what an amazing content! Thanks Chris! While I already knew most things I still learnt something and you style of presentation is unmatched on youtube. One of the few channells among the 60 I am subscribed to that has "all notifications" enabled
Thanks for the clear gimickless video. I have personal experience of Windows corrupting a Bootcamp partition on my Mac.
Without warning could not get the Mac to boot. Luckily I have a good Apple repair centre who sorted me out (had to reformat the hard drive!!) I have the following setup now, very old PC running WindowsXP (not online), a newer PC for Windows 10, Mac for most of my work, and a really old Laptop running Linux Mint! Moral of the story don't throw away old computers!
Awesome episode. Although I have been using Debian for years at home, I always pick up helpful information from your episodes. Again, great series, and I hope more viewers open their eyes get away from expensive and proprietary software, and finally become part of the greater community that has made the transition. Cheers.
Those installation rabbit holes are sufficiently contorted that keeping a trail of breadcrumbs (or roll of wool, if you're a classicist) in the form of copious notes is pretty well mandatory. Even if you don't have to retreat a step or two occasionally, it must be easy to forget which stage you've reached.
Oh yes, notes are a must!
I agree it's the only way to go. The most important thing to do first is defrag the windows hard drive then backup everything. I watched quite a lot of UA-cam vids & took copious notes of how to install the system safely, use of the various terminal commands (nothing to be scared of) & how to repair grub using a live ISO and the terminal. I did several dry runs using the live disk before switching to a dual boot system (Linux Mint 17.3 & W7). I've never looked back
Keeping detailed notes was a technique I discovered for myself very early on. Trying to juggle everything in the mind may seem possible and perhaps it even is. But why make things harder than they need to be? Then if I ever need to refer back to what I've done computers are better at remembering than I am.
You make the world a better place💐 @ Dual boot: ...One learns a lot about Grub, boot-loaders and Windows recovery...🙄 A solution I had good experiences with was keeping the old pc when I bought a new one and running the old with Linux! I was able to extend the use of an old system for 10 years! One reason I was able to do this was a ...certain computer explaining channel that informed me about dystros that cater to old hardware! 😉
Having suffered a number dual boot issues/corruptions long ago, I once opted to run 2 separate PC's with one for working and one for entertainment. A costly solution indeed, but it really was the best option. The detachment was perfect and ensured my focus was optimal. I need to repurpose an older machine for a deep dive into Linux as I don't want the hassle of dual boot issues.
I've just retired from a career in IT, starting on IBM's System 370 in the 70's. It's horrifying to see how the desire of vendors to keep control has made home use more and more complex.
Despite opportunity geekdom has meant that we're still dealing with complex commands, multiple incompatibilities. Finicky and crappy languages that have much more complex errors than assembler or COBOL.
Rant over. Thanks for persuading me that despite using Linux servers and windows workstations for the last couple of decades, there is no hope of practical simplicity.
I need the easy way out, I don't want to waste the time I have left fighting with this nonsense any more. I no longer get paid for it.
Now, can I do all I need on a simple tablet? Probably.
Frankly it's insane.
Yes, it's easy to get tired from this type of sh*t, when you work in the field. E.g. when Windows Update, which is supposed to make things better, breaks printing and you have to fix this on a number of clients' computers
Hail Technical Brother! My career began in the 70s as well (writing COBOL for a DEC PDP8E) and I agree: I want the simplest practical solutions I can get on lightweight hardware.
You cannot blame vendors if their customers constantly demand more complex technology. Everyone wants to live large and too much is never enough. Now if you can manage to get by with less yourself then you can manage to keep things relatively simple I suppose. Good luck finding your balance in retirement.
@@1pcfred Just one example. I saw a lot of po reassure from fashion freaks to constantly change languages used for development. Each switch increased development and maintenance costs due to longer development times caused by immature languages, obscure errors which should have been trapped at compiler, later IDE stage. Multi language installations meaning staff became generalists and dealing with errors took longer.
Dumb customers was a big part of the problem, I agree. IBM used to say expect 8 lines of code per programmer per day. Those 8 lines could do a lot. Now it's barely a function call.
Net result was my guys spending three times as long as they did ten years earlier to develop equivalents with each language change.
@@kevgermany I think I know what you're talking about. Change for change sake. Playing Devil's advocate we still don't know what we're doing at the dawn of the Information Age yet. As sophisticated as things may seem now we're really just getting started. There's plenty of evolution yet to come.
This is a very interesting series. Perhaps the most unknown aspect of Linux is its level of security. I believe there are programs that can monitor or improve Linux security but which produce long complex logs that I probably wouldn't understand so an intro to maintaining and improving security at a basic level would be very useful. I have previously used your video on installing Virtual Box to run office 365 and it works perfectly.
Clear, concise and complete as usual. I've been playing around with ARM distros for my Raspberry Pi 400 and have been seeing some interesting choices. I'm interested in using WINE on the ARM platform.
This is an excellent video on this topic, showing in one place the various options to use Windows programs. Well done, sir!
Another great video Chris! Abstraction rules! Something I’ve noticed is that any application or OS, through ongoing use, trains us to accept its own particular ways as normal. Use it and in time it becomes intuitive, but this is different from instinctive. By using Windows, Linux and MacOS regularly it is possible to become quite multi-lingual, which seems to enhance the experience of them all. I’d love to see a video on ‘abstraction’, and how it so totally (and helpfully) creates an illusion that there is more here than zeros and ones. BSD and Linux are so close that the differences are more like local accents than different species. The abstraction fools us so helpfully.
Thank you, Mr. Barnatt. 🙏🏼
I'm thrilled to know that all those options exist, and very impressed by Linux' flexibility in particular. I have it in mind to maintain separate, dedicated Windows and Linux platforms (I have desk space for each, and more than enough components lying around to build the latter), but the ability to set up *virtual machines* in Linux is simply brilliant. Quite a 'Nice to Have' option in case I ever need it.
_On to the next video!_ 👍🏼
Greetings! I hope all is going well on your Linux journey.
@@ExplainingComputers Indeed it is! 😁
This is great info for the newcomer. I'm a long time linux users, as long as is possible actually. But always had to keep a dual boot or a separate Windows machine to run Windows software. But happily I'm almost free of such software outside of work, and they have provided me with a laptop specifically for work. So my personal machines for the first time can be all Linux.
My kids play games so they will stick with Windows for the foreseeable future. Until Linux becomes accepted by the game developer industry anyway.
Me / I (age 55) did what you suggested and now my main old laptop (2013) with 'Intel© Core™ i5-3230M CPU @ 2.60GHz × 2 and only 8 GB of RAM' runs Linux Mint 20.2 and even Windows 11 in an Oracle Virtual Box. The most exiting is that after Windows 11 went through its slow installation and update process, it now runs (after installing VirtualBox Guest Additions!!!!) as smooth as I ever could have imagined via a Virtual Box. Greetings from The Netherlands to you, Mr. Scissors (Meneer Schaar) and Stanley the Knife (Stanley het mes) :-)
This is a great to hear -- and shows others it can be done! :)
A thoroughly interesting video from Chris at EC, I learn something new every Sunday! I think that security for the next video in this series is important, running windows software in wine does come with it's risks, not to say that Linux is a 100% secure it's not. Maybe another video about running a VM using pass through in quemu KVM where it can access the GPU for better performance in video/photo editing or for games, maybe in the pipeline? :)
A new ExpleaningComputers video, what a wonderful day
Greetings Marci. :)
Best way to enjoy both operating systems is keeping Windows on your main laptop and buy a second laptop (lower in specs, could be second hand) for Linux.
Thanks a bunch for these videos. They really help with my understanding of Linux. I learn something from every video of yours, even if I feel I know a subject you cover. Keep up the great work!
Thank you for another great video! I'm actually trying to get my work pc setup to run linux with windows on a virtual machine recently, so this helps a lot. I would like to see a video on networking. In particular, how to connect with RDP and shared network folders between Linux and windows pc's on a local network. Thanks again. Take care
Lots and lots of great information. I'm on the verge of pulling the trigger and migrating to Linux.
Really excellent choices, with important nuances. Thanks for another great video Chris.
Thanks Christopher, interesting video. I declare I am solely using Linux everyday, I'll continue to use virtual machines for installing Windoz when I really have to!
Yet another exceptional guide, Chris, and as a recent adopter of Linux for my daily computing I'm sure I'm going to run into a Windows-need at some point and this is where I'll turn for help.
... However, I found myself considerably distracted once you showed off 3D Train Studio. I'm not even a model train guy (though I'm growing to appreciate them as well as real trains via a LOT of UK tv series devoted to them) but I immediately needed to look this up and see if I can get it running on my laptop!
I appreciate you and your channel enough to have referenced many of your topics to friends. In my mind, security trumps networking and all other topics.
As a Linux user since 2000, this has some very useful information- especially for Newbie's. But VirtualBox is not for the faint at heart!
Great video as usual from EC! I could never see any good reason for switching from Unix-type operating systems to DOS, and later Windows, so don't have that problem of switching to Linux with all its associated withdrawal symptoms. My recommendation for Windows users is to go cold-turkey, dump it entirely for Linux, then never look back. 🙂
Great Video! Love the series. My vote would be Network, then Security, then peripherals like printers. Running my duel boot daily driver and have had a few hung boots. Haven't yet made a VM of Windows in Linux yet, and I think you have just given me the inspiration to take that next step. The XP VM is a great idea. Thanks again, for another great video.
Another Great Video- Most helpful. I Thought that the ''Pros and Cons'' method was very effective. Thank You.
This Linux series was a good idea and there's good stuff here. I'm sure I would have learned a lot from it it it was around when I switched to Linux. But I did okay anyway. I agree that the virtual-machine option is the way to go in more important applications and that's my plan for the one thing I have that needs Windows when the time comes. Much to my surprise, when I needed to set up a Zoom situation for a family member last year, I saw that they had a native Linux version available. I was expecting having to make it work either with WINE or a VM, so that made things a lot easier. Very smart on their part, in my opinion.
Not first but always here to learn about Tech and English at the same time
Thanks for watching. :)
Very comprehensive! I've played with several of these options, but it's nice to see them set out side-by-side.
My next system build will likely be Ubuntu with a Windows VM for backwards compatibility.
I also agree 110% with your subtle dig on the MS Office "Ribbon". I hated it when it came out, and still do!!!!!!
From my perspective it's more like a Windows survivor's guide to using Linux. :)
Nice.
I suppose for absolute completeness, you could have mentioned running your windows programs on a separate PC somewhere else in your house or office and accessing them via VNC or similar. This would give you the same experience as cloud windows, without the recurring expense (other than the cost of the extra PC). I have done this in the past with an old PC being able to run the programs from the convenience of my new laptop.
Yes, this is true -- another solution! And I thought about including the use of something like the LattePanda streaming cable (that interfaces a LattePanda SBC to a PC so that it can (eg) run Windows in a Window in Linux, but running on the LattePanda hardware. So many options! :)
Yes I do the same, that's how, in my case, I "expand" my 8GB RAM laptop with a 32GB RAM desktop running in another room on a second monitor just above the display of my laptop, while still using the great keyboard and trackpad of my laptop and having a multiple monitor setup
@@ExplainingComputers
Streaming a WinPC via LPanda (as Digitalguy) or similar, to a laptop would indeed make a very interesting video.
I'd like to chill with a light laptop - with the power of my desktop available - Bonus if there is a way to do that wirelessly (short range high bandwidth?)
I love Linux.I switched this August from win10 to Manjaro and it's great even good for gameing.
Another very informative video Chris, I'm really pleased you are making this series especially considering the Windows 11 hardware compatibility situation. I'm more concerned with the security and printer compatibility situations but whatever order you want to tackle those subjects mentioned at the end of the video is fine by me.
P.S. I've read a number of times that older HP printers have poor driver support in Linux compared to Windows, that might be a point to address during the future printing video.
I love that storage has become so cheap, fast, and small. I've used the Drive Swap Dual Boot method for over a decade, via an IcyDock four bay enclosure. It's really cool to use SSDs now much in the way I used floppies in the 80s. :)
Glad to see you looking chipper and thanks for another great presentation.
Thank you for your second episode, a very unique content (as usual) I really appreciate you efforts.
Hello, fellow Christoper! Back once again with a brand new video, are ya?
Nice. I Love it, i love it.
man your videos are treasures love you from 🇩🇿🇩🇿
Beginning @3:25 is IMO the very reason why a lot of Windows users are hesitant or fearful of migrating to Linux. Using the CLI for installing programs is something the average Windows user never has to do in order to install any program. Secondly, a Windows user does not need to choose what "Distro" they are using. Even having this option to download a program will be confusing to the a new Linux user. Thirdly, even if the new Linux user gets the program installed correctly, there a lot of Linux programs that do not place an Icon on the desktop not in the start menu and needs to be start from the CLI. I also believe that until Linux makes installing programs easier from GUI and makes programs uninstallable from GUI, Linux will not reach the mainstream like it should.
I can only agree.
Great run through! You can also have a type 1 hypervisor on a separate PC and run all of your OSes on that at will. This can be a bit cumbersome and daunting for non-technical users (not IT Pros) as it requires a server and networking skills. But you would have, in essence, a dedicated computer for labs and other things that require using applications that suffer from vendor lock-in.
Fantastic, exciting, so much information. As always thank you Chris! 😀
Yes, Grub has given me much stress in the past
This was so mesmerizing that I failed to notice when I spilled my tea... (yes really!)
What next? Networking in linux gives me fits. I've had so little success (and then inconsistently) that I gave up, and when I need to schlep files around my home network, I fire up the WinXP VM and it has no problem at all!
Sounds to me like you have poorly supported wi-fi hardware. That happens in Linux. Some can work with configuration and some is just problematic. The network stack in Linux tends to work well enough though. Otherwise the Internet wouldn't be running on Linux.
@@1pcfred Not using wifi. Wired network. This is just trying to access my shared Windows drives (they are numerous) without having to do something silly like copy the IP address from the router.
@@Reziac if you're using Windows as a server you're already doing something pretty silly. I have a file server but it runs NFS on Linux. I mount it using it's IP too. My share is just a directory. I don't use Windows at all so it's not a topic I am familiar with. Well, I know enough about Windows to avoid it.
I love all your videos, I've learned many things about computer.
Great to hear!
Excellent! The Win11 install Reg hack was brilliant. Cheers.
I am really enjoying your Linux series professor....thank you!
Thanks Chris. I had MS Office running under Wine for Long time. It worked well. Cheers
6:27 possibly the funniest moment of my weekend, thank you!!
:)
10:51 What a great showcase of why to switch to Linux from Windows. :D
Thank you for excellent explaining every week videos! You are the best!
👍👍👍👍👍Thank You, Christopher!
Absolutely perfect timing... I am still maintaining Windows access via Virtualbox... just that Virtualbox is Great fun. VM snapshot is one great way to backup an unstable "OS" ;).
Once a while, I might need to generate MS Office file to submit work; just fire-up my VM so to avoid font & formatting issue.
And those time that need to use Webex...
Upgraded from XP to Linux & happy & blissful eversince!
Snapshots are indeed an eye-opener -- as is the ability to move/copy a VM from one PC to another! :) Glad to here that your migration was a success!
@@ExplainingComputers Totally agree‼️ That's Live-Migration... making cloud horizontal scaling a breath-taking wonder. Pushing data-cemtre network to adopt Mass-Scale coordinated Automation - Orchestration. So we have Super-Dancing-Network tt can flex according to business application needs.
That also brings back some very fond memory when I did a Live snapshot whilst in the middle of "compiling" Linux-from-scratch, power down my VM & PC and leave home for work. Was so thrilled when everything just continued to compile properly from where it left off.
That was on a Pentium586 PC.
This has cleared so much up for me. another amazing video Chris :)
I love the use of the word "Exciting" :D