Post
by muffybean » Fri Oct 18, 2019 3:11 pm
Hi blueocean. It came with a that 250gb drive but changed it to a 120gb Sandisk SSH drive and 1gb memory. I actually ramped that up to 2gb, which is its maximum. Originally it was a dual boot with Windows 7 and DOS, I removed both of them a few years ago and installed Windows 10. I have two desktop PC's; one is my main desktop with Windows 10 and the backup Acer Desktop had Windows 10. I have been getting frustrated with all the problems and bloatware with Windows 10 and decided a week ago to dual install Linux Mint 19.2 to the Acer desktop as a dual boot as I have plenty of space on that, 2 Samsung 250gb SSD's, plus two SATA HDD, 3gb plus 2GB. I have to say I am not that impressed on the boot times on this machine; into Windows 10 it is 1m but Linux, 1m 12 secs. I will post something on that another time.
I did read that it is not a good idea to dual boot as it can corrupt the Windows drive. Partly as a result of this I decided to try Linux Mint 19.2 Xfce on my netbook. As I mentioned above I did a clean install overwiting the Win 10 installation, the first option in the selection Erase disk and install Linux Mint, It was trying to reduce the swapping figure below 60 to 15 that I found that the operating partition Ext4 was not mounted. Despite various attempts to try and achieve this as I had only installed LM a couple of days ago I went for a reinstall, this time choosing the last option, Something Else, selecting ext4 partition, plus use as Ext4 Journalling File System and put a / point box. It installed fine but no WiFi.
Not being a patient man, this afternoon went and reinstalled Windows 10 <BG>. I now have my WiFi back again after doing this, so will try once more to install LM over this. Hopefully my WiFi will be there this time. Not sure whether to do that first clean install or the Something Else. If I get into trouble maybe you will kick my arse or something but as I said I am complete newbie on Linux having spent my computer years since mid 90's, first in DOS, then 3.1 all the way up to Windows 10, so it is a steep learning curve for me.
Running Linux Mint MATE on 2 desktops + Linux Mint Xfce on Netbook