On 6/19/21 12:19 PM, William Lee Valentine wrote:
I had installed a back version of Debian in a partition on a
500-megahertz computer that was otherwise running Windows 2000 and
MS-DOS.

When I had finished installing Linux, on that machine, Grub wanted to
know whether I wanted it installed in the master boot record. It
reported seeing Windows 2000 and MS-DOS in other bootable partitions. I
agreed. Grub has allowed me to boot any of the three of these when the
BIOS has executed.

I later installed Debian 10.2 in a partition on a 64-bit computer that
was otherwise running Windows 10.

When I had finished installing Linux, Grub wanted to know whether I
wanted it installed on the master boot record. It reported seeing
"Windows Vista" in another bootable partition. I agreed. This time,
however, Grub modified the master boot record to allow only Linux to be
booted. I had to pay to have Windows 10 reinstalled.

I tried again, this time avoiding the master boot record entirely. I
asked that Grub install itself on a 3.5" diskette (in a USB floppy
drive). It did not. It installed itself instead on the master boot
record, again allowing only Linux to be booted. Again I had to pay to
have Windows 10 reinstalled.

I have now another 64-bit computer, running Windows 10, whose BIOS
provides the option of booting from a USB device. If I install Debian
10.2 in a partition on this computer, would I tell Grub to make the
partition bootable? Would Grub instead install itself on the master boot
record anyway, allowing only Linux to be booted? I can not afford to
lose access to Windows 10 again.

Thank you for your assistance.

-- William Lee Valentine


I suppose it's kinda late for this advice, but you did not have to pay twice for Windows. You should have just ordered a disk or a USB stick with Windows on it. Install it--if it's a newer computer, it probably has the windows code number in the BIOS, but even if it doesn't, you should be able to install Windows any number of times from the
one source device, ON THE SAME COMPUTER. I don't know what you mean by
"paying to have it installed"--- you install it yourself from the software you have paid for ONCE. It is not difficult, only time consuming, and you may have to try a couple of
times to get the earliest parts the way you want them. Then install Linux.
(I haven't installed Debian, but I've installed a number of Linux systems, both deb and KDE
over Windows, and usually it "just works.")
--doug

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