freshert said:
Just a quick off-topic question. Why do you want two os's on a computer?
Most people who install linux will leave their windows partition there for playing games or specific software they need for which there is no linux equivalent.
There aren't a lot of popular mainstream games for linux, and using wine (a windows "emulator") to play windows games doesn't always work well.
I for instance, paid $300 for a used copy of Photoshop, which I find a lot easier to use than The Gimp, so I leave a small xp partition laying around for graphic design.
I also leave xp installed on any computer I'm installing linux on until I make sure all the bugs are worked out with drivers etc... For example, I can't get the 2nd monitor in my dual monitor setup to rotate, so I can't use linux on my desktop computer. If I had nuked my XP partition I would have had to start from scratch.
As for why you'd install linux in the first place, it's a very powerful operating system that is years beyond windows in features and security... Whenever I install windows I have to change a million settings, show hidden files, turn off system restore, fast indexing service, print spooling, pcmcia services, wifi services (on my desktop) and a few dozen other things that don't help me, but slow the computer way down.. I have to then install all the software I need on a day-to-day basis... winrar, firefox, vlc, a billion video codecs, AIM, utorrent, etc etc.. Linux comes with all of these by default and the default settings are a lot more sane. Linux is also a lot more powerful as a programming platform, since all of the programming tools you need are built right into the OS.. it's really trivial to write up a tiny program to do what you need, like the
LPF PM Downloader script I wrote on the help/suggestion board.. or a little script that lives on my wireless router that checks a certain email address every few minutes to see if I've sent a text message to it containing a specific code, and turns on my computer if it does.. (so if I'm anywhere in the world, I can turn on my home computer from my cell phone)... it also has a ton of powerful networking features, things like a SSH server, an FTP server, a VNC server, would all be a pain to download install and configure on windows, are all built into linux... so instead of paying $50 for PC-Anywhere, $30 for WinSSHD, and $30 for an FTP server, all this is installed configured and ready to go by default in linux... so anywhere in the world I can use my home computer as if I was sitting in front of it.