Can I install Ubuntu 16.04 LTS along side Windows 10 in my Asus Vivobook 14 without any problem? It has an Intel i7 8th Gen processor 1TB HDD [duplicate]

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  • Will my device work with Ubuntu?

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  • How do I install Ubuntu alongside a pre-installed Windows with UEFI?

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Can I install Ubuntu 16.04 LTS along side Windows 10 in my Asus Vivobook S14 without any problem? It has an Intel i7 8th Gen processor 1TB HDD. I want to know if someone is using Ubuntu by dual booting on this laptop and how this is working. Thanks in advance.










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marked as duplicate by karel, Fabby, David Foerster, Zanna, Eliah Kagan Apr 20 at 3:58


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  • Hi, and welcome to the site. Unfortunately, we can make no guarantees as to whether you can instal without any problems. Chances are, you should be able to, but there are only three things certain in this world.
    – anonymous2
    Apr 18 at 19:15














up vote
-2
down vote

favorite
1













This question already has an answer here:



  • Will my device work with Ubuntu?

    1 answer



  • How do I install Ubuntu alongside a pre-installed Windows with UEFI?

    12 answers



Can I install Ubuntu 16.04 LTS along side Windows 10 in my Asus Vivobook S14 without any problem? It has an Intel i7 8th Gen processor 1TB HDD. I want to know if someone is using Ubuntu by dual booting on this laptop and how this is working. Thanks in advance.










share|improve this question













marked as duplicate by karel, Fabby, David Foerster, Zanna, Eliah Kagan Apr 20 at 3:58


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.














  • Hi, and welcome to the site. Unfortunately, we can make no guarantees as to whether you can instal without any problems. Chances are, you should be able to, but there are only three things certain in this world.
    – anonymous2
    Apr 18 at 19:15












up vote
-2
down vote

favorite
1









up vote
-2
down vote

favorite
1






1






This question already has an answer here:



  • Will my device work with Ubuntu?

    1 answer



  • How do I install Ubuntu alongside a pre-installed Windows with UEFI?

    12 answers



Can I install Ubuntu 16.04 LTS along side Windows 10 in my Asus Vivobook S14 without any problem? It has an Intel i7 8th Gen processor 1TB HDD. I want to know if someone is using Ubuntu by dual booting on this laptop and how this is working. Thanks in advance.










share|improve this question














This question already has an answer here:



  • Will my device work with Ubuntu?

    1 answer



  • How do I install Ubuntu alongside a pre-installed Windows with UEFI?

    12 answers



Can I install Ubuntu 16.04 LTS along side Windows 10 in my Asus Vivobook S14 without any problem? It has an Intel i7 8th Gen processor 1TB HDD. I want to know if someone is using Ubuntu by dual booting on this laptop and how this is working. Thanks in advance.





This question already has an answer here:



  • Will my device work with Ubuntu?

    1 answer



  • How do I install Ubuntu alongside a pre-installed Windows with UEFI?

    12 answers







16.04 dual-boot asus






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asked Apr 18 at 18:57









Ritu

1




1




marked as duplicate by karel, Fabby, David Foerster, Zanna, Eliah Kagan Apr 20 at 3:58


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.






marked as duplicate by karel, Fabby, David Foerster, Zanna, Eliah Kagan Apr 20 at 3:58


This question has been asked before and already has an answer. If those answers do not fully address your question, please ask a new question.













  • Hi, and welcome to the site. Unfortunately, we can make no guarantees as to whether you can instal without any problems. Chances are, you should be able to, but there are only three things certain in this world.
    – anonymous2
    Apr 18 at 19:15
















  • Hi, and welcome to the site. Unfortunately, we can make no guarantees as to whether you can instal without any problems. Chances are, you should be able to, but there are only three things certain in this world.
    – anonymous2
    Apr 18 at 19:15















Hi, and welcome to the site. Unfortunately, we can make no guarantees as to whether you can instal without any problems. Chances are, you should be able to, but there are only three things certain in this world.
– anonymous2
Apr 18 at 19:15




Hi, and welcome to the site. Unfortunately, we can make no guarantees as to whether you can instal without any problems. Chances are, you should be able to, but there are only three things certain in this world.
– anonymous2
Apr 18 at 19:15










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
0
down vote













It shouldn't make any difference what modern laptop you have, and your's should be fine.



From Windows make sure you have at least 50GB of unallocated space to start with for Ubuntu, then boot from a 'live' UFD. When you install Ubuntu choose the 'Something Else' option, not the 'Install Alongside Windows' one. There's a thorough installation procedure here. Even though it's for Linux Mint, the procedure is virtually identical. Pay attention to step 7 as that's where people often go wrong.



Regarding partitions, when it asks you if you want to create them, unlike the author in step 4 I'd advise you to make one for /Home. The only other partitions needed are for your root /, and /boot - I think the latter is created automatically (can't remember). The swap partition is optional these days, and for most purposes not really necessary, but I made a 4GB one anyway just for hibernation.






share|improve this answer




















  • Thanks for your detailed answer! But this model of laptop is not listed under the laptops certified by the official site of Ubuntu as compatible ones with Ubuntu. That's why I am concerned and scared if my windows partition will also get lost. Please help me regarding this.
    – Ritu
    Apr 19 at 6:28










  • Like I said you have nothing to worry about concerning Windows. You should have made unallocated space on your drive and Ubuntu installs on that. If you're that concerned about Windows then take an image of your W10 system, and store it externally. I have image back-ups for both systems.
    – Paul Benson
    Apr 19 at 13:58


















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
0
down vote













It shouldn't make any difference what modern laptop you have, and your's should be fine.



From Windows make sure you have at least 50GB of unallocated space to start with for Ubuntu, then boot from a 'live' UFD. When you install Ubuntu choose the 'Something Else' option, not the 'Install Alongside Windows' one. There's a thorough installation procedure here. Even though it's for Linux Mint, the procedure is virtually identical. Pay attention to step 7 as that's where people often go wrong.



Regarding partitions, when it asks you if you want to create them, unlike the author in step 4 I'd advise you to make one for /Home. The only other partitions needed are for your root /, and /boot - I think the latter is created automatically (can't remember). The swap partition is optional these days, and for most purposes not really necessary, but I made a 4GB one anyway just for hibernation.






share|improve this answer




















  • Thanks for your detailed answer! But this model of laptop is not listed under the laptops certified by the official site of Ubuntu as compatible ones with Ubuntu. That's why I am concerned and scared if my windows partition will also get lost. Please help me regarding this.
    – Ritu
    Apr 19 at 6:28










  • Like I said you have nothing to worry about concerning Windows. You should have made unallocated space on your drive and Ubuntu installs on that. If you're that concerned about Windows then take an image of your W10 system, and store it externally. I have image back-ups for both systems.
    – Paul Benson
    Apr 19 at 13:58















up vote
0
down vote













It shouldn't make any difference what modern laptop you have, and your's should be fine.



From Windows make sure you have at least 50GB of unallocated space to start with for Ubuntu, then boot from a 'live' UFD. When you install Ubuntu choose the 'Something Else' option, not the 'Install Alongside Windows' one. There's a thorough installation procedure here. Even though it's for Linux Mint, the procedure is virtually identical. Pay attention to step 7 as that's where people often go wrong.



Regarding partitions, when it asks you if you want to create them, unlike the author in step 4 I'd advise you to make one for /Home. The only other partitions needed are for your root /, and /boot - I think the latter is created automatically (can't remember). The swap partition is optional these days, and for most purposes not really necessary, but I made a 4GB one anyway just for hibernation.






share|improve this answer




















  • Thanks for your detailed answer! But this model of laptop is not listed under the laptops certified by the official site of Ubuntu as compatible ones with Ubuntu. That's why I am concerned and scared if my windows partition will also get lost. Please help me regarding this.
    – Ritu
    Apr 19 at 6:28










  • Like I said you have nothing to worry about concerning Windows. You should have made unallocated space on your drive and Ubuntu installs on that. If you're that concerned about Windows then take an image of your W10 system, and store it externally. I have image back-ups for both systems.
    – Paul Benson
    Apr 19 at 13:58













up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









It shouldn't make any difference what modern laptop you have, and your's should be fine.



From Windows make sure you have at least 50GB of unallocated space to start with for Ubuntu, then boot from a 'live' UFD. When you install Ubuntu choose the 'Something Else' option, not the 'Install Alongside Windows' one. There's a thorough installation procedure here. Even though it's for Linux Mint, the procedure is virtually identical. Pay attention to step 7 as that's where people often go wrong.



Regarding partitions, when it asks you if you want to create them, unlike the author in step 4 I'd advise you to make one for /Home. The only other partitions needed are for your root /, and /boot - I think the latter is created automatically (can't remember). The swap partition is optional these days, and for most purposes not really necessary, but I made a 4GB one anyway just for hibernation.






share|improve this answer












It shouldn't make any difference what modern laptop you have, and your's should be fine.



From Windows make sure you have at least 50GB of unallocated space to start with for Ubuntu, then boot from a 'live' UFD. When you install Ubuntu choose the 'Something Else' option, not the 'Install Alongside Windows' one. There's a thorough installation procedure here. Even though it's for Linux Mint, the procedure is virtually identical. Pay attention to step 7 as that's where people often go wrong.



Regarding partitions, when it asks you if you want to create them, unlike the author in step 4 I'd advise you to make one for /Home. The only other partitions needed are for your root /, and /boot - I think the latter is created automatically (can't remember). The swap partition is optional these days, and for most purposes not really necessary, but I made a 4GB one anyway just for hibernation.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Apr 18 at 20:53









Paul Benson

395117




395117











  • Thanks for your detailed answer! But this model of laptop is not listed under the laptops certified by the official site of Ubuntu as compatible ones with Ubuntu. That's why I am concerned and scared if my windows partition will also get lost. Please help me regarding this.
    – Ritu
    Apr 19 at 6:28










  • Like I said you have nothing to worry about concerning Windows. You should have made unallocated space on your drive and Ubuntu installs on that. If you're that concerned about Windows then take an image of your W10 system, and store it externally. I have image back-ups for both systems.
    – Paul Benson
    Apr 19 at 13:58

















  • Thanks for your detailed answer! But this model of laptop is not listed under the laptops certified by the official site of Ubuntu as compatible ones with Ubuntu. That's why I am concerned and scared if my windows partition will also get lost. Please help me regarding this.
    – Ritu
    Apr 19 at 6:28










  • Like I said you have nothing to worry about concerning Windows. You should have made unallocated space on your drive and Ubuntu installs on that. If you're that concerned about Windows then take an image of your W10 system, and store it externally. I have image back-ups for both systems.
    – Paul Benson
    Apr 19 at 13:58
















Thanks for your detailed answer! But this model of laptop is not listed under the laptops certified by the official site of Ubuntu as compatible ones with Ubuntu. That's why I am concerned and scared if my windows partition will also get lost. Please help me regarding this.
– Ritu
Apr 19 at 6:28




Thanks for your detailed answer! But this model of laptop is not listed under the laptops certified by the official site of Ubuntu as compatible ones with Ubuntu. That's why I am concerned and scared if my windows partition will also get lost. Please help me regarding this.
– Ritu
Apr 19 at 6:28












Like I said you have nothing to worry about concerning Windows. You should have made unallocated space on your drive and Ubuntu installs on that. If you're that concerned about Windows then take an image of your W10 system, and store it externally. I have image back-ups for both systems.
– Paul Benson
Apr 19 at 13:58





Like I said you have nothing to worry about concerning Windows. You should have made unallocated space on your drive and Ubuntu installs on that. If you're that concerned about Windows then take an image of your W10 system, and store it externally. I have image back-ups for both systems.
– Paul Benson
Apr 19 at 13:58



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