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On Mon, 14 Jul 2025 10:11:37 -0400, Cousin Ricky wrote:
> I learned the hard way that they're starting to build Windows computers
> that are incompatible with GNU/Linux dual boot.
Microsoft has never been particularly "friendly" with dual booting non-MS
operating systems. "Fast boot" certainly wreaks havoc with trying to dual
boot, since it's essentially a "suspend to disk" type of functionality
that bypasses the boot loader.
The introduction of secure boot also created problems, but Linux makers
have adapted. I run openSUSE Tumbleweed here, and it is fully supported
for secure boot, and the modern grub bootloader can be used to dual boot
Windows (with openSUSE's implementation, it generally will detect Windows
and add it to the boot menu).
That said, I haven't used a Windows native partition on any of my personal
PCs in years. Got a few older machines and laptops that have ancient
versions of Windows on them "just in case" (because updating firmware on
those systems required Windows back then). My main system now has never
seen a local Windows installation (only in VMs for the rare times I need
something very Windows-specific, like working on a presentation with a
Powerpoint template that Libreoffice just won't work with).
--
"I learned long ago, never to wrestle with a pig. You get dirty, and
besides, the pig likes it." - George Bernard Shaw
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