Windows and Linux on the Same Laptop? You bettcha!

Techwriter10 0 Tallied Votes 746 Views Share

The EE Times reported earlier this week that the Dell E4200 and E4300 laptops are running both Linux and Windows on the same machine. Why both you ask? The Linux OS provides a quick boot for checking email and other "light" computing duties while the Windows side allows "heavier duty" computing like running Microsoft Office applications. It runs with two chips, one from ARM and one from Intel. The ARM chip, provides instant on booting and is much more power efficient, while the Intel chip provides the juice to run apps that require more computing power.

It's Two, Two, Two Computers in One

This is an interesting approach bringing the Smart Phone/Netbook idea to a larger laptop, but the dual boot, dual use idea has been tried before. When Samsung came out with one of the first UMPCs (later to be known as Net Books) back in 2006, it tried a dual boot environment. You could boot into Windows for your computing tasks and AVS Now, a multimedia front-end for playing music, viewing movies and viewing photos. I thought it was odd at the time, I will admit, as though Samsung couldn't decide if it wanted the Q1 to be a business or consumer device.

From a practical perspective, this implementation as described in the EE Times article would provide a way for users to perform tasks they tend to do on the road such as retrieve email without waiting for the endless Windows boot sequence, but when you think about it, most business travelers are going to have a smart phone in their pockets for this task anyway. Why should I take out my laptop at all if I can whip out my phone and check my email? It's just easier.

I Wish The Real World Would Stop Hassling Me

My first thought was that once users get a taste of Linux, why would they ever boot into Windows? This is especially true when you consider that more and more computing is moving to the cloud (even Microsoft's tools). As we move forward and more tasks get performed in the browser, it will become less necessary to boot into Windows. In fact, the OS wouldn't really matter so long as it included a browser. But in the real world, most business users are still working with the desktop version of Microsoft Office as their primary business software.

It's hard to say if this is just a gimmick or if it comes to pass, if this is an approach that could appeal to business users giving them the best of both worlds on a large screen. It will take a certain level of technical aptitude, I'm guessing to understand the two environments (depending on how it's implemented), but for a certain class of business user, this could be useful. I just don't see it having wide market appeal.

joepatrick 0 Newbie Poster

I.m using dual OS on my laptop WinXP_Prof and Ubuntu Jaunty.
Reboot my laptop ~ 40 sec.

I think if user want to see Linux -> use LiveCD. If You liked Linux -> install any distro Linux and be happy!

This is really helpful in small business system that I have worked before, if one OS fails then you can use the other but the files as it is like what happen in a certain escort agency london where all the bookings were completely deleted after the error.

Joe

navpreet0817 0 Newbie Poster

i want windows and linux on my laptop? give me a better procedure

mayaescorts 0 Newbie Poster

very interesting.

johhny-marshal 2 Junior Poster

This is a nice combination of Windows and linux. Linux is very secure OS and Windows is user friendly and easy to use OS

Renntag 0 Newbie Poster

My last 5 laptops have dual booted windows and Linux. My current unit (HP) came loaded with Win7. I was able to set aside a partition for linux and install without effecting the original install of Win7.

greenknight 0 Newbie Poster

@ johnny-mashal - Linux can be very easy to use if you get the right distro. Ever try Puppy? Does everything most computer users need without ever opening the console. Helpful wizards walk you through tasks. It's lightning fast, too.

greenknight 0 Newbie Poster

I just found out that Puppy is now available as a .exe installer for Windows - just download and run the installer for the Puppy version you choose, and you've got a dual-boot setup. Read about it at http://puppylinuxnews.org/releases/install-puppy-linux-in-windows/

Puppy would be perfect for dual-booting on a laptop anyway. It's an extrordinarily small yet full-featured OS, won't take up too much of your limited HD space. The Windows installers should make dual-booting easier than it's ever been.

londonladies 0 Newbie Poster

very usefull, i like very much this article.

brunette4u 0 Newbie Poster

I.m using dual OS on my laptop WinXP_Prof and Kubuntu
Reboot my laptop ~ 25 sec.

bustyesc 0 Newbie Poster

I'm use just windows

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