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Originally Posted by WindowsXPNoob So if I really got to like Linux Ubuntu from the live cd than installing Ubuntu without Wubi would be the right choice because it would be faster than the live cd or Wubi? |
I'm a little confused by that sentence, but I think the answer is yes: setting up a dual-boot will give you the best performance of the 3 options (liveCD, wubi, dual-boot). The downside is that it's riskier (since partitioning can make you lose data if something goes wrong).
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If so how do you partition without a live cd or Wubi?
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You actually don't have to do the partitioning yourself. The Ubuntu installer will automatically shrink your existing Windows partition during the install. The only thing you have to decide is how much space to give Linux and how much to leave to Windows. There's a little slider you drag to determine that.
I would
highly recommend you backup anything important on the Windows side and run a defrag before you do this, however. The reason is that Ubuntu will try and shrink your Windows partition from the far end of the disk, and if you don't defragment you could in theory lose some files on the Windows side. Defragmenting brings those files away from the far end of the disk and clusters them toward the front.
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Also would wine let me install stuff like msn messanger, aim, xfire, or computer games (Like Quake, age of empires, age of mythology, or online games.) without struggling too much?
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You can connect to AIM and MSN Messenger using native Linux clients like Pidgin. There is a native Linux version of every Quake title. The other games might or might not work in Linux. Check the
WineHQ Application Database for a good idea of what works and what doesn't.