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dis_honestfamiliar, (edited ) in Linux Ubuntu Dual-booting horror

It sounds like you have Windows in one disk and Ubuntu in another disk. Confirm this before proceeding.

Now if that’s true, and what you said about dedicated windows ssd on a boot loop, it sounds like MRB needs fixing. I suggest you make yourself a windows 10 USB disk or disc. Run that and when it asks to install, you look for recovery. And try to run the fix boot and recover MRB.

Something like these 2 commands

Bootrec /fixboot

Bootrec /fixmrb

commands

Classy,

You are correct. Thank you for giving some options for processing on this path. I’m still deciding whether I want to continue trying the dual boot route, figuring out how to get VMX running, or just maining Linux and dealing with the learning curve. I do feel that my end plan, however long that would be, is to be using Linux as my primary OS anyway and there’s no time like the present, but for all I know after sleeping on it I may decide that I still want a functional Windows in my laptop.

HulkSmashBurgers, in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

Hell yeah I am. I’ve been using linux since 2019. I bought a dell laptop and installed manjaro.

I recently discovered GNU Guix and decided to install it onto an old desktop (built in 2009) I had laying around. I used a system crafters custom installer and the accompanying video to do a non-libre kernel install. I’ve been liking Guix and I think I’m going to install it onto my laptop and make it my daily driver.

PlutoniumAcid,
@PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world avatar

The sheer amount of tech lingo in your post is exactly why most people won’t switch. We just want to use the damn thing, not tinker with it all night.

Deckweiss, in Help with laptop buying decision

linux-hardware.org

this resrource was a blessing for me. You can search for laptop models and see exactly what works/doesn’t work under which distro.

pegazz,

Wow thanks! I didn’t know this existed, this is great!

tobistokles, in Help with laptop buying decision

I have a 1st Gen Framework and don’t recommend it.

Battery life in standby is TERRIBLE, we are talking 40% overnight (after optimizations) and very rarely the notebook wakes up randomly.

The build-quality is better than cheaper laptops, but definitely worse than my old Thinkpad. Although the keyboard is better than many consumer laptops, it feels a lot mushier than my Thinkpad’s. Several keys have lost their cover already and the display hinges are wobbly & feel cheap. I also got small spot with burn-in on the display. After 2 years the Framework looks worse than my 6-year-old X1 Yoga.

Linux support is okay, most things work out of the box. However, it’s far from perfect and absolutely not a First Class experience. For example, there is currently no way to get the most recent BIOS via Linux and apparently we are months away from a solution. In Fedora 39 Silverblue I experience very rare freezes (according to Arch Wiki this is due to Intel and not a Framework-exclusive problem, I still want to mention it).

My next laptop will be a new or used Thinkpad again.

pegazz,

Thanks for the heads-up. I’ve seen that the first gen had a few issues, I understand your frustration. I even saw a solution involving soldering a wire onto the motherboard? My hope is that they got better as they gained experience, and that hardware support on Linux will only imrove with time.

rotopenguin, in Zorin OS 17: Linux for Windows Users | ExplainingComputers
@rotopenguin@infosec.pub avatar

All the real homies are still running Linux95

just_another_person, in Linux Ubuntu Dual-booting horror

You have an EFI bootloader, so your BIOS should be able to detect your Windows partition and just boot it off it’s still in good working order. Go into your BIOS boot menu and see if you can boot to Windows from there as a first test.

Thcdenton, in I'm Done With Windows, Are you?

Not yet. I’m not upgrading windows again so the day draws near.

jjhanger, in Linux reaches new high 3.82%

So some people switched to phone only after Windows 8 security stopped…

Jokes aside, it’s cool to see it move up no matter how small the move is.

Atemu, in How to secure (podman or docker) containers for public-facing hosting?
@Atemu@lemmy.ml avatar

Why does it need to be public-facing? There may be solutions that don’t require exposing it to billions of people.

Security is always about layers. The more independent layers there are, the fewer the chances someone will break through all of them. There is no one technology that will make your hosting reasonably secure, it’s the combination of multiple.

You’ve already mentioned software ran inside an unprivileged sandbox.

There’s also:

  • Sandbox ran unprivileged inside a VM
  • VM ran inside unprivileged sandbox
  • Firewall only allowing applications to open certain ports
  • Server running all of that hosted by someone else on their network with their own abstractions
cyclohexane,

I’m thinking of hosting things like small fediverse servers, which from my understanding need to be public facing. Also thinking of running a monero node.

Caravaggio, in Linux Ubuntu Dual-booting horror

What was your starting point? Having Windows on the machine already and installing Ubuntu on top of it? (that would be commonly regarded as the ‘correct’ order) If not, and you can afford to scrap everything, that’s what I’d go for. If yes, and it’s Ubuntu that’s messing up your dual boot, I’d see if Windows can be restored after removing Ubuntu, and then try a different distro (I’d go with Mint Cinnamon, it normally provides smooth install experience).

Classy,

I’m considering other options though I’ve enough Ubuntu so far. Fedora also looks nice. I’m a complete GNU/Linux novice but I can generally work around technical sides of programs relatively fine. I’m not sure why this issue is kicking my ass so much lol

BiggestBulb, (edited ) in Help with laptop buying decision
@BiggestBulb@kbin.run avatar

I don't have any experience with Tuxedo or Framework, so I can't really comment on those 😅

I have definitely heard Lenovo ThinkPads are great though, and I'm currently rocking a Lenovo Legion Slim 7 which has been fantastic so far (albeit I JUST got it and I'm rolling Windows on it with WSL2 Debian, so not exactly a pure Linux experience).

bobs_monkey,

I have a Carbon X1 10th gen, and it is a beast. 32gb ram, and I swapped in a 2tb SSD. Running Arch on it and it’s pretty flawless.

Tzeentch, (edited ) in I used mokutil a while back but now it's preventing me from booting into other OSs. How do I properly disable it?
@Tzeentch@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

mokutil --disable-validation

Though this sounds more like a case of needing to disable secure boot in your bios ? As far as i know Mint has no secure boot support, and the mokutil keys of a previous installation wouldn’t affect a fresh one

vortexal,
@vortexal@lemmy.ml avatar

I tried that a few hours ago and it didn’t seem to do anything. But I just tried it again and got this message “Failed to request new MokSB state”.

vortexal,
@vortexal@lemmy.ml avatar

Ok so it turns out that I got that error message because I forgot to use sudo, but it still didn’t disable MOK. However, as I stated in the update in my post, I was able to get around MOK with my password and I’m currently reinstalling Mint.

independantiste, in Help with laptop buying decision
@independantiste@sh.itjust.works avatar

If you don’t want a clevo/tongfang laptop with a custom logo on the lid, look at Framework, Starlabs, Purism, Dell or Lenovo, though the last two don’t offer Linux on most models.

If you don’t really care about the OEM, but still want a “guaranteed” good Linux experience, then System76, Tuxedo or Slimbook should fit your needs. Just consider that Slimbook and Tuxedo are from Europe so you could get duties if you’re in the US

bobs_monkey,

Lenovo supports Linux directly. You can buy it with Ubuntu preloaded, and they also give instructions for you on their website.

andrew0, in Help with laptop buying decision
@andrew0@lemmy.dbzer0.com avatar

The Framework 13 inch model should be plenty, especially if you want to dev on the go. Much more lightweight and smaller, and you can connect it to external monitors if the screen size is not big enough. Also, you shouldn’t have issues running Linux on either laptops.

Instead of going for the 16 version, I would use the extra 900-1000 euros (that’s the amount I saw I could save between the two almost maxed-out models) to make a dedicated server or mini-cluster to run your workloads. Deploy Kubernetes or Proxmox on it, and you’ll also get some more practice on it outside work if you want to run stuff for your home lab. That is only if you don’t want to game on your laptop, but I’d still put that money aside to make a desktop.

pegazz,

Thanks for the advice! The 16 is probably as overkill as you say, but I’ve come to prefer a larger machine to work on.

I already have Proxmox installed on a secondhand mini-pc (one of those NUC / thin-client like office machines) and it’s been a great way to (re)learn a few things indeed!

mateomaui, in Linux Ubuntu Dual-booting horror

Sorry this isn’t an answer to the question, only a general reminder for whoever needs it to always create a disk image backup beforehand using Macrium Reflect or similar, so you can rollback nightmares like this.

Classy,

Listen to what this person has to say, you people! I ignored multiple recommendations across probably ten different webpages to create a backup disk and I could have walked a lot of this back and started over, at the very least. FWIW, I’m sure that whatever is going on now is not irreparably broken, but certainly I could have saved myself some headaches.

mateomaui,

Again, sorry I cannot offer a solution. I’m sure it can be fixed, I’ve just never had to figure it out.

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