CT320: Windows Installation and Dual Boot                
Purpose                
- Learn how to install Windows.
- Learn that order is important.
Windows Installation                
- Power up the system and press F9 to load the boot menu.
- Select CD drive from the menu after inserting your Windows 7
Installation Disk. Boot in “legacy” mode, not in “EFI” mode.
- Select English as the language, Mountain Time as the time zone
and US as the keyboard.
- Select "Custom (advanced)" in the installation wizard and proceed.
- Delete all existing partitions. All of them!
- Let the installation proceed.
- After the installation completes:
- Select "ct320-X" as the system name, where X is the system number
- Select
ct320
as your username and password
- Select "Use recommended settings" for updates.
- Reboot your system
- Observe that we cannot boot to Linux.
- That’s because we overwrote it. It’s gone!
- It wouldn’t have worked, anyway. Windows does not play well
with others.
- We will need to reinstall Linux.
Linux Reinstallation                
- Boot from a Linux installation disk.
- Create a 10GB swap partition, and split the rest of the disk
space more-or-less evenly between:
/home
- Windows
- you’ll have to resize it
- mount it as
/Windows
/home
(you didn’t forget about it, did you?)
/
/home
(last reminder!)
- Set up networking, per Installation & Configuration.
- Set up user
ct320
, per Configuration.
- Set up
root
’s password, per Configuration.
Dual Boot                
After rebooting, you should see a menu that allows you to boot
from Linux or Windows. Try it.
                
Points                
- Boot to one OS.
- Show that OS to the TA.
- Demonstrate that you can reboot to the other OS.