Nah, there's no such thing as stupid questions. I'll repost to the list so that it can be archived (http://www.geocrawler.com) for future people.
On Tue, 2002-06-04 at 15:52, Steve Harmon wrote: > I saw your post on debian-users about dual booting with lilo on your > Thinkpad. I hope it was on debian-laptop, or I made a mistake! > I'm a Debian noob who is building a machine I will dual-boot between > Debian and XP. I may try the installation on an old TP 600X I have for > "practice." Honestly, I've been messing around with Debian for only about 6 months, but I've found it increasingly easy to maintain, even though initial configuration is difficult. Like any OS, there is a learning curve, especially with installing and configuring software packages. > Would you point me to some good documentation on dual-booting and > partitioning so I don't have to pollute the list with stupid > questions? No problem. The first place I'd look is The Linux Documentation Project (http://www.tldp.org). I can't find a dual boot how-to right now for some reason, but I'm pretty sure one exists. Another good place to look is the Linux Laptop page (http://linux-laptop.net). I'll give you the run-down on how I like to partition on my laptop. hda1 WinXP/Win2000 (C:) NTFS 5 GB hda5 /boot ext3 30 MB hda6 swap swap 256 MB hda7 / ext3 5 GB hda8 /mnt/data (D:) FAT32 18 GB The D: (hda8) is a huge file share that I can write to from both OSes. I also install Windows apps in it (usually D:\Apps). I can also access my MP3s from both OSes in this partition. Other people might want to partition up the / into /, /usr, and /home, but I don't consider that a big deal. I usually end up rebuilding my laptop every month (guys at work tease me about it all the time), so I don't get too fancy. However, Debian's ease of upgrades, installations, and maintainence has me thinking about keeping my laptop this way. Normally, I install this way: 1. Install Win2000/XP in a 5 GB partition. 2. Install Debian (configuring partitions as above) 3. Run Grub or LILO on hda. Debian's LILO seemed to detect WinXP just fine (it labled it as WinNT, but oh well) 4. Make the data partition 5. Have fun. I hope this helps. If you have any other questions, let me know. Jeremy -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]