How easy is it to switch back to windows?
from FemboyNB@lemmy.blahaj.zone to linux@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 04:42
https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/12795942

I’m considering switching to linux but I’m not a computer savvy person, so I wanted to have the option to switch back to windows if unforeseen complications (I only have 1 pc). Is it just a download on usb and install? And what ways can I get the product key or “cleaner” debloated versions.

#linux

threaded - newest

AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 04:49 next collapse

You can install Linux on a flash drive to test it out. Or spend $50 on a SSD and just have both

henfredemars@infosec.pub on 01 Jun 04:56 next collapse

It’s not the fanciest solution, but if you’re really not sure what you’re doing, not wiping out your Windows in the first place could be the best option.

eveninghere@beehaw.org on 01 Jun 07:49 collapse

I mean physically wiping out the disk is. Yes.

Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 17:20 collapse

Yes! This is one of my favorite aspects of Linux. Most (all?) distros let you straight up use Linux and try it out before you even install it!

CaptObvious@literature.cafe on 01 Jun 04:54 next collapse

It isn’t all that difficult to install a dual-boot setup, so you can choose at startup which OS to use.

bobs_monkey@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 08:08 collapse

Bingo. I haven’t had a windows install mess up my bootloader in a while, granted I haven’t booted my windows partition in a while either. As long as you create a separate partition for the bootloader, it’s stupid easy to fix with a liveusb.

CaptObvious@literature.cafe on 01 Jun 11:42 collapse

I’d forgotten about the bootloader. I only dual booted with XP for a few months before wiping the drive and dedicating that machine to Mint.

AnAnonymous@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 04:56 next collapse

If you have a big storage device you can just partition it and have dual boot, or if you need to use windows stuff you can always virtualize it with Virtualbox for example.

Answering you question, you just need to download the windows iso and use MAS(google it) to activate windows/office permanently. But anyway nowadays isn’t required to activate windows unless you want to change how your desktop looks.

lurch@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 05:01 next collapse

you should already have backups which will let you restore the system with everything you need. your post indicates you don’t have one. what if some malware or hardware failure fucks it up or so? create a backup strategy that works for you. it will also give you the freedom to do experiments like this. best of luck.

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 Jun 05:12 next collapse

There’s no turning back…

PlutoniumAcid@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 07:08 next collapse

Objection. I ran Ubuntu for 6 years but returned to Windows because too many things were just a little bit too odd, too off, too hands-on-config-files.

To be fair, the newer versions of Windows suck hard. 10 was really bad, 11 is horrific. I dream of going to Debian some day.

fushuan@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 10:23 next collapse

Ifnyou have the money and the mono slots, buy another hard drive and install Linux there. Then, boot that drive without touching anything from the other ones. You can even load them up and use those files no problem.

CaptObvious@literature.cafe on 01 Jun 11:28 next collapse

It’s blasphemy in some circles, but I never recommend Ubuntu. Mint seems much more straightforward and easier to make it feel like Windows for new users. There’s a Debian-based version if you prefer it.

I run Mint (Ubuntu version) on a couple of old laptops. But I use Debian on a Linode (Akamai) cloud server for a little hobby project. It’s a good distro.

caseyweederman@lemmy.ca on 01 Jun 13:47 collapse

Not just Debian but ditch Gnome too. KDE really pulled me in. So much about it just makes sense that I’m mad I didn’t take it seriously sooner.

Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 17:25 next collapse

Yeah, let’s confuse people asking honest questions and make them think Linux is a destructive, one-way migration.

I love Linux, but the fans are insufferable sometimes.

SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 Jun 17:40 collapse

Yeah, people who can’t a joke are so fucking insufferable.

lord_ryvan@ttrpg.network on 15 Jun 19:37 collapse

WOAA-OH

MY PRESENCE FADES TO BLACK

HarriPotero@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 05:15 next collapse

It depends on how far down the rabbithole you go.

I switched to Linux 27 years ago. My wife asks me to help her with her Windows computer every now and then, and I can’t really do it for more than a few minutes before my blood pressure is in the risk zone.

30p87@feddit.de on 01 Jun 06:54 next collapse

I switched 4 years ago and I experience the same. But to be fair, I also use an atypical setup designed for efficiency, so basically the opposite of windows in every aspect.

chraebsli@programming.dev on 01 Jun 07:35 next collapse

similar here. im still ‘new’ to linux but have to use windows for my apprentice. also my father uses windows. so often i have to click a button multiple times, ads, or window not responding, ads, sometimes its slow af. did I already mention ads?

TCB13@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 09:16 collapse

so often i have to click a button multiple times, ads, or window not responding

Maybe you should use something faster than a potato as a computer. 😂

did I already mention ads?

If you’re capable of installing Linux and getting a productive desktop experience with it I’m sure as shit you are also capable of disabling a few toggles under Windows.

Jumuta@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 12:21 next collapse

Potatoes are free hardware though? You can grow them yourself, study the source code, make changes to it and release it for others to use. Pretty sure you can’t do that with most modern computers

TCB13@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 14:17 next collapse

A modern distro with let’s say GNOME won’t also run decently on a potato…

chraebsli@programming.dev on 01 Jun 21:19 collapse

i love that comment😂

chraebsli@programming.dev on 01 Jun 21:18 collapse

my laptop is pretty good, its just windows using much resources. yeah i’d be able to but i only use it like 3h per week for one buggy app. its not worth it

TCB13@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 21:22 collapse

I highly doubt it. Not saying that Windows is good, but my i7 8th gen with 16GB of RAM boots Windows 10 Enterprise (with the usual crap disabled) into the desktop faster than the time it takes to post. Info here and here. Frankly Debian with GNOME doesn’t boot much faster than Windows on that laptop.

chraebsli@programming.dev on 02 Jun 09:03 collapse

my laptop probably has very similar specs to your laptop. also, windows just uses more computing resources than linux in general.

i dont care about if its few seconds faster at booting or has few percents more resources availabe after hours of configuring.

all i need for my apprenticeship is just a windows laptop to work with office365 and a few specific apps, which dont need full resources. but it has to be windows because of domain policy from ADDS.

my apprentice will end in a few weeks and since i wont need these apps anymore tomorrow in a week, ill delete the windows partitions from my laptop.

id appreciate you helping me and others with articles how to get a bit faster windows system, if id asked for it, but i didnt.

TCB13@lemmy.world on 02 Jun 10:12 collapse

Again, I’m not saying Windows is good.

I’m saying your statement was an over exaggeration and yes Windows by default has too much crap but it can be disabled as documented.

Simply that.

BackOnMyBS@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 13:23 next collapse

this guy uses Arch, btw

Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 17:20 collapse

This is not what they are asking. They just want to know if they can revert their setup if they end up not wanting to keep Linux.

original_reader@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 05:17 next collapse

Recent iterations of Windows have been easy to install, esp. when using an entire drive. I (almost) never had issues.

Hupf@feddit.de on 01 Jun 06:15 collapse

As long as you’ve got a Microsoft account

grue@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 05:31 next collapse

Just run Linux straight off the installation media in what’s usually called something similar to a “live environment” until you’re sure it works.

Otherwise, installing Windows is somewhat more difficult than installing an “easy” Linux distro (e.g. Mint) because you’ll have to deal with “activation” bullshit and updated/manufacturer-provided drivers. Unless your computer comes with a computer-specific recovery disk or recovery partition (that you didn’t delete when installing Linux), in which case it’s easier.

cyborganism@lemmy.ca on 01 Jun 05:37 next collapse

If your PC already has Windows, you can create an installation USB key.

…microsoft.com/…/create-installation-media-for-wi…

There’s no need for a Windows key because your system is already registered with Microsoft. It creates a unique ID from your computer’s peripherals.

So just pop in the USB key, boot from the usb key and follow the instructions. To boot from the USB key you might need to go configure the boot order in your BIOS.

hallettj@leminal.space on 01 Jun 06:12 next collapse

This seems like the right answer to me. Whether or not you decide to dual boot, make one of these USB keys so you can recover if something goes wrong.

signalsayge@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 13:46 collapse

This is the best answer I’ve seen in this whole thread. You’re right that the key is not needed. Microsoft identified your system components and did the original activation based on the hardware you’ve got on your computer. All you need to do to bring back a licensed copy of Windows is to reinstall it.

muhyb@programming.dev on 01 Jun 05:55 next collapse

Unless you want to feel like Cypher from Matrix, there is no turning back. Jokes aside, if your computer is pre-built or a laptop, it probably already has Windows key saved in BIOS. Though you must install the same version of Windows when you got it the first time. However, there is another way. With a program called Magical Jelly Bean KeyFinder, you can extract your installation’s keys (yes, not just the Windows key), and you can use those keys to install Windows later. It’s better anyway because sometimes they don’t give you a key.

You can debloat your PC after the installation with certain tools.

vipaal@aussie.zone on 01 Jun 12:40 collapse

www.revi.cc – found this on another post here. Not sure how to link the post itself, so linking what the post wanted to share. This aims to debloat Windows, and is free and open source.

ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org on 01 Jun 05:55 next collapse

Install Linux in a VirtualBox virtual machine to try it out. No change to your existing Windows system is needed.

Better: install it in a virtual machine on a second hard drive: if you like it and you’re ready to switch, switch to booting the real Linux hard-drive and turn the Windows hard drive into the virtual machine, to use within Linux when you need it.

If you switch to Linux, this will happen:

  • It’s gonna be tough: it’s a different system, you’re not used to it. Like everything else, it’s hard to change and get used to new things. So realistically expect some learning curve and some pain. It’s normal.

  • If you give it an honest shot but you decide Linux is not for you, you’ll switch back to Windows. You’ll be back to your old normal, but you’ll start to notice how infuriating and spirit-crushing it is a lot more, having been exposed to a non-insane, user-centric OS for a while. And then you’ll be that much sadder in Windows and you’ll wish you had the best of both OSes - which you can’t.

Just be aware than exposure to a non-Windows OS will probably make you hate Windows more and make your life in Windows ever slightly more miserable, even if you don’t stick to the non-Windows OS.

Kiloee@discuss.tchncs.de on 01 Jun 11:22 next collapse

I haven’t used Linux in a decade and half (I know myself and I wouldn’t reboot once done gaming and I have one game that is not just wine or whatever and done and it’s my main one) and I still miss things from it. The first few PCs I used were Linux. It just sticks with you.

lud@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 17:27 collapse

If you have windows pro, education, or enterprise I recommend Hyper V instead. It’s much faster because it’s a type 1 hypervisor instead of a type 2 like virtual box

sharkfucker420@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 06:07 next collapse

If you could install the linux then you can re-install the windows

ChojinDSL@discuss.tchncs.de on 01 Jun 06:26 next collapse

Windows, in the past has been known to sometimes overwrite the Linux boot loader after a windows update, so be careful with that, since windows assumes no other os exists in the universe. Depending on your windows version, it might not be a bad idea to backup the license key. Recent versions store your computer’s information in the cloud, so unless you change a lot of components, it should reinstall without much hassle. But it doesn’t hurt to extract the key just in case. Microsoft gonna Microsoft. There are tools for this. E.g. jellybean key finder (or something like that).

Depending on the distro, it might help to disable secure boot in the uefi bios.

That being said, take it one step at a time. Don’t try to recreate everything you were doing in windows right off the bat. Get comfortable with the desktop first. Try different apps for certain tasks. If you have an Nvidia GPU, the experience can vary greatly between different distros. As others have mentioned, most distros have a “live environment” on the installation cd, which you can test to see if your hardware is recognised straight away. That being said, don’t feel like you’re married to a specific distro. Most Linux users will distro hop quite a bit, before they settle on one that just feels right. And even then they might change again after a while, if they get bored.

Phen@lemmy.eco.br on 01 Jun 06:48 collapse

Windows, in the past has been known to sometimes overwrite the Linux boot loader after a windows update.

Linux (ubuntu) do that pretty often too, people just don’t notice it because they’re unlikely to be running any other bootloader if they have Linux’.

Successful_Try543@feddit.de on 01 Jun 07:59 collapse

Yes, but if e.g. openSuSE installs its Grub 2 on top of Ubuntu’s Grub 2, you end up with a different theming. If Windows overwrites the bootloader, the Linux boot options are gone.

toddestan@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 06:34 next collapse

If you’re comfortable with swapping out components in your PC, just buy a second SSD. Remove the Windows drive, put Linux on the new drive. If Linux doesn’t work out for you, just swap them back.

You could also run a live Linux distribution from a USB stick, or potentially install Linux onto a USB stick or SD.

JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 06:53 next collapse

Just because no one else is mentioning it, there’s a free tool in github to activate any copy of Windows, that could be on a new machine, a VM, Windows To Go, etc. You don’t need a product key.

Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 Jun 06:59 next collapse

Link for those that want to check it out for research purposes.

Edit: It works with Office too

bobs_monkey@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 08:04 collapse

Or, punch this into powershell:

irm https://get.activated.win | iex

massgrave.dev

Gormadt@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 01 Jun 13:44 collapse

The devs mention that as the recommended method on their GitHub (which I also recommend as it’s way easier)

Activating Windows is so easy nowadays

bobs_monkey@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 16:04 collapse

Iirc, Microsoft themselves were advocating the method I mentioned when users were having issues (I can’t recall where I read that though)

Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 17:27 collapse

It’s worth noting that this is almost certainly illegal, for those who care. Windows is $5-$10 if you buy keys, which are 100% legal. Just throwing that out there.

Linux wins here with that price tag being *free.

JackGreenEarth@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 17:35 collapse

Microsoft owns github, if they weren’t fine with it they would have taken the tool down

CrazyLikeGollum@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 07:02 next collapse

Something I only saw mentioned in a somewhat snarky comment in this thread (apologies if I missed it elsewhere) is that Windows has the option to do a full system image backup.

If you have an external hdd or a nas, from the Windows Backup applet in control panel (not settings) you can create a system image that will contain a full backup of your C: drive and, optionally other drives in your system. You can then restore that backup from the recovery options in your windows install media.

For the windows install media, I’d recommend using the windows media creation tool to create a usb installer on a separate usb key from your Linux installer and then setting it aside just in case. Trying to create windows install media from within Linux is, while not impossible, difficult.

Obviously, you should do all of this before committing to installing Linux to disk. Most Linux install media also functions as a live Linux environment from which you can try things out and see if things will work for you.

haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com on 01 Jun 07:12 next collapse

You dont even install. You download, write to usb and try linux.

Give it a good hour or more, trying to do a couple basic things like browsing the web, using some apps.

If you find yourself liking the experience, hit install and go dual boot. You can then decide on every boot if you need windows or linux today.

In case you feel like getting rid of windows, you can just disable the item in the boot menu (tutorials online) i guess.

So as you see, there are many failsafes which you can use to not get stuck without a computer that you understand.

Have a good one.

chris@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 12:19 next collapse

I would agree way this, with one caveat: Does OP plan to game on Linux?

Gaming on Linux has come very far, but it’s not perfect and not something you can really get a feel for in a USB live environment. At that point rather to dual boot and try sticking with Linux for a while.

haui_lemmy@lemmy.giftedmc.com on 01 Jun 12:40 collapse

Uhm… you do realize that dual booting is step two in what I said right?

BackOnMyBS@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 13:24 next collapse

Hi!! 👋☺️

chris@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 16:44 collapse

You’re right, my bad.

BackOnMyBS@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 13:27 collapse

@FemboyNB@lemmy.blahaj.zone fyi, when you run Linux off of a USB drive (aka live USB), it’s likely going to run a lot slower than when installed on an SSD. Just take that into account when you’re testing it if you go that route. I wouldn’t want you to think Linux is slow as frozen molasses and forgo the full experience because of a misunderstanding.

uhN0id@programming.dev on 01 Jun 17:36 collapse

To that point it’s probably going to be a lot slower than running it on an HDD too. That said, the USB performance is surprisingly good when you consider you’re literally running an OS over USB and the OS isn’t even in an optimized state.

Tsunami45chan@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 07:46 next collapse

I dual boot my windows and linux so I can switch between them whatever I want. Depending how you install linux, you can open or check window files on linux. But windows can’t check linux files. I kept my windows because adobe products doesn’t support linux.

Lucidlethargy@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 17:30 collapse

What do you use to dual-boot? I used to mess with Linux often on my Mac, which was easy (hold option when starting the machine). I haven’t tried a Windows PC, though.

Colour_me_triggered@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 08:02 next collapse

Why you trying to detransition?

Diplomjodler3@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 08:23 next collapse

The easiest way to preserve an existing Windows installation is to take out the drive it’s on and put in a new drive for Linux. That way if you want to go back, you can just swap in the old drive again. Installing M.2 or SATA drives is very easy and 100% doable even if you’re not an expert.

catch22@programming.dev on 01 Jun 14:21 collapse

this 👆 dual boot doesn’t always work because windows can be finicky with boot partitions as well as boot partition security issues. Save yourself a headache if you want to go back, just pop your current drive out, and put it in a external case so you can access the files. Hard drives are cheap.

boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net on 01 Jun 08:43 next collapse

Get a second SSD, install there

TCB13@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 09:13 collapse

Yeah but make sure you disconnect your Windows SSD before doing anything.

BananaTrifleViolin@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 09:21 next collapse

You can keep windows and install Linux next to it.

The best way would be to add a new ssd or m.2 card to your pc and install Linux on that. Make that the main boot device and Linux normally will detect Windows and give you a boot menu where you can chose between Linux and Windows each time you boot.

Alternatively you can resize the windows partition and install Linux onto free space on your main drive. This is more fiddly and things can go wrong with this if you don’t know what you’re doing.

You can also boot Linux on an external USB drive but this will be slower and may guge you a false impression of Linux. You can also try Linux in a virtual machine like Virtualbox but again this will be slower and will give you a false impression of Linux as a daily driver OS.

I personally run a dual boot system - I have two m.2 nvme drives, one with windows and one with Linux. I barely use the windows partition now but I keep it around for rare work stuff or the rare occasion I have a game I can’t get to run in Linux. And I mean rare - booted Windows maybe 3 times in last 6 months.

linucs@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 09:55 next collapse

I know it’s not what you’re asking but switching back is truly horrible, I have to use w11 at work and I hate every second of it. One drive shoven down your throat, Xbox stuff wants to install something everytime I update, installing stuff from random exes found on websites (I know the store exists but it sucks if your needs are not “I want to install candy crush”), changed something in your path variable? Reboot! Wtf? I really hope microsoft abandons windows in favour of its cloud apps for people who need it and lets Linux distros rule the desktop world

hactar42@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 13:10 next collapse

I’m only commenting this because you said you’re stuck on Win11 and not defending it, but…

Using winget and Chocolately will make your app installation much better.

Also, to reload your path variable in a PowerShell prompt you can run the following:

$env:Path = [System.Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable(“Path”,“Machine”) + “;” + [System.Environment]::GetEnvironmentVariable(“Path”,“User”)

Again, your gripes are all legitimate, but these might help ease your pain.

linucs@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 15:28 collapse

Thanks, appreciate it!

steeznson@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 15:55 next collapse

I used scoop as my package manager on windows. It even lets you install gnu coreutils like ls, cat and find to run in powershell.

scratchandgame@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 16:04 collapse

I really hope microsoft abandons windows in favour of its cloud apps for people who need it and lets Linux distros rule the desktop world

This only born more commercial distros and make macos and chromeos span even more.

Open source benefits when there are so many companies competing.

www.openbsdfoundation.org/contributors.html

kbal@fedia.io on 01 Jun 11:07 next collapse

Technically it's easy. You just leave your Windows install where it is (assuming you have enough disk space) and it'll be waiting there ready to embrace you again when you decide to give up on freedom and come crawling back. Psychologically it could be a challenge.

baseless_discourse@mander.xyz on 01 Jun 11:34 next collapse

recently I have encountered a problem with this, it is indeed not so straightforward to create a bootable windows 10 USB instillation media under linux.

The media created by fedora media writer is not bootable and the media created by ventoy lacks drivers. I was then able to create a media quite easily with the last windows machine in my household. I don’t know if it is a temporary bug or fundamental incompatibility.

So I would suggest you to keep a windows installation media at hand in case you need to switch back, or make sure at least one of your friend has a windows machine you can borrow.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 02 Jun 02:28 collapse

This has not been my experience. With does ISOs work fine with Ventroy and can be written to the disk with dd or gnome writer.

baseless_discourse@mander.xyz on 03 Jun 12:16 collapse

Hum, on retrospect, my ISO might be just corrupted. I have never tried to redownload it.

I never know gnome has a image writer tool, and would you please let me know what “dd” stands for?

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 14:26 collapse

  1. Open up gnome disks

  2. Find the drive (the usb drive not your boot drive)

  3. Click restore image

  4. Select the ISO

  5. Click next and start

Wait for the grass to grow. Once it is done either eject it or run the sync command.

You also can use the dd is a command line utility. Keep in mind it doesn’t have any safety protections and can blow though important data in the blink of an eye

eugenia@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 12:02 next collapse

Υou can download the Windows iso, burn it in a usb stick before you nuke it to install linux, and find free legal serial numbers online (there are various serials for all versions of win10/11, all legal – it’s considered semi-activated with these).

hash0772@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 12:26 next collapse

You can just install Windows without a product key.

jcarax@beehaw.org on 01 Jun 12:50 next collapse

There’s a very good chance the key is stored in the EFI, making this the absolute easiest part. I’d just make sure to get the Windows installer on a USB stick before installing Linux, if there aren’t any other Windows machines around. And also make sure I have a wifi/ethernet driver available before reinstalling Windows, if it comes to that. It can be tricky to install Windows without network, these days, and even if you get past that (which I’d recommend, to bypass a Microsoft account), you still need it once you’re in the installed OS.

BigFatNips@sh.itjust.works on 01 Jun 13:08 next collapse

massgrave.dev

erre@programming.dev on 01 Jun 15:07 next collapse

burn it in a usb stick before you nuke it to install linux

This is very very important unless you have another windows computer around. Took me a whole day to figure out how to properly burn a windows install USB from linux. It isn’t straightforward.

f4f4f4f4f4f4f4f4@sopuli.xyz on 01 Jun 20:23 collapse

Oof. It’s extremely easy with Ventoy.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 02 Jun 02:27 collapse

If the device ran Windows before the key is stored in hardware

monaho@lemmy.eco.br on 01 Jun 12:49 next collapse

If you have a flash drive and an external disk you can boot into Rescuezilla (a disk cloning/backup/restore distribution) using the flash drive, save/backup your OS disk as an image in the external disk, and restore it as needed. After restoration, you will have your OS disk as it was at the time you saved it.

jjlinux@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 13:46 next collapse

Easy in terms of installing windows? No harder than a normal install in any situation. Easy in terms of usability? Can’t even imagine ever trying. Have a hard enough time using my windows cloud r at work.

Nibodhika@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 15:46 next collapse

Ok, so I’m assuming you have never installed Windows before. It’s not that complicated (especially nowadays that Windows finally learned how to automatically search for drivers, that used to be the most annoying part). First of all make a note of your current Windows CD Key, you will need it to reinstall and not every computer can retrieve it if you uninstall windows.

After that, you need a windows USB drive, just like the Linux one you’ll use to install Linux. You can get it from Microsoft website, but again I advise you to get it while on Windows (Microsoft hides the way to download the iso on Linux).

Finally I strongly recommend you DON’T uninstall windows, instead keep it and install Linus side by side. This is called dual booting, every time you turn on your computer it will ask you where to boot.

secret300@lemmy.sdf.org on 01 Jun 17:59 next collapse

Install: easy.

Seeing how much more annoying it is after using Linux: hard.

lseif@sopuli.xyz on 01 Jun 23:36 collapse

ESPECIALLY if you have gotten used to a fancy window manager or custom hotkeys… the amount of times i go “mod+q … oh, right… alt+f4”

secret300@lemmy.sdf.org on 02 Jun 02:55 collapse

Swear, although I’m more of a “mod+shift+q” kind of guy

lseif@sopuli.xyz on 02 Jun 03:03 collapse

i use a custom kill script with overrides such as dont kill firefox, and properly kill discord. then $mod+shift+q to use the standard kill as a fallback

kurodriel@lemmy.world on 01 Jun 20:03 next collapse

Since you’re not computer savvy, I really think you should watch some YouTube videos on how to dual boot linux with windows. That way you can keep windows without having to reinstall it if you ever wanna go back.

some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org on 01 Jun 21:55 collapse

Yes, you should look for hand-holding tutorials. I don’t mean that to slight you. The first time I installed Linux was way before the internet was fast or full of easy to access info and way before most had access to a secondary device (like a phone) when hitting a roadblock.

It booted to a text prompt. I had no idea how to login (probably root / root or root / password or root / [blank], but htf would I know that?) so I erased and reverted back.

The point is, if you have very little experience, there’re tons of resources to help you out. Search them out. Lean on folks here for help when needed. You’ll be ok.

TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 22:01 next collapse

You need to buy a separate $25 SSD for Windows. Do not attempt to have both Linux and Windows on same HDD/SSD, Windows will always kill Linux.

A safe method to go about a debloated and privacy friendly (yes it’s possible) Windows installation is using AME Project’s playbook with their Wizard tool, on top of a fresh ISO you get from Microsoft. For activation, use the tools from massgrave.dev website, HWID activation.

After installing Windows, consider using simplewall as your program firewall and to limit Microsoft telemetry heavily.

Avoid installing random crap, and use a solid antivirus like Kaspersky (ignore political nonsense, merit matters) if you pirate TV shows, movies and software.

I cannot tolerate Windows other than how AME Project does it. Their playbook is better than AtlasOS and other playbooks.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 02 Jun 02:26 collapse

Do not use Kaspersky, Avast or whoever else. Stick with the built in defender as that is the safest.

Also I think they were asking how to wipe Linux completely.

TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml on 02 Jun 07:08 collapse

Defender is dogshit. Never rely on a cloud based antivirus, and never rely on one that cannot protect against ransomware. Putting Kaspersky alongside Avast is beyond disingenuous.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 02 Jun 13:34 collapse

They all have downsides but since you have defender anyway you might as well use it

TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml on 02 Jun 16:36 collapse

By using Defender, you stay in the illusion that it can protect your system from 0days, ransomware and other malware, and that it can protect you in case the internet is not working on your system for some reason.

Kaspersky is number one at defense from 0days, ransomware, can rollback the damage done by malware, and even when most of its components may get disabled, or even without internet, it can give an unparalleled level of defense against malware and protect your system and files. Nothing else is even remotely as good.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 02 Jun 20:54 collapse

Kaspersky is just of of the companies that exploits fear. Also it is somehow more shady than pretty much everything else.

TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml on 02 Jun 23:31 collapse

That is some alternate dimension reality, not the one I am living in. You probably also think malware is imaginary, and Linux is immune to it and Windows is some magical malware magnet. I do not subscribe to such ideas that belong to an extremist section of FOSS community. I am hardcore in my considerations of products/tools based on merit and performance.

With a platform like Windows that is risky to use without a condom (antivirus or on demand scanner), I refuse to entertain the ideas of stuff like ClamAV that does not work or cloud based Defender that is not good enough, just because it may provide privacy, but at the end is unable to protect your data, your privacy and security anyway.

I will probably just share this from 4chan.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/547a09fe-173a-4e0d-a5c3-fd7c450c6da4.jpeg">

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 01:05 collapse

Your the one pushing Russian greyware. I never said Linux is magically secure. You just need to be aware of things that are a security or privacy panacea.

mxl@lemm.ee on 01 Jun 22:22 next collapse

Other answers got you covered, but please back up your personal data before doing anything big, even if you are feeling confident

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 02 Jun 03:20 collapse

Story time, I once was reinstalling windows and I could not remember which drive had all my important data on it and I was getting ready to go out. But windows xp installer was on the disk selection screen and I couldn’t remember which disk was windows and which was my data. I said fuck it I’ll figure it out later. I get home and my monitor is off. I jam enter a bunch of times to wake it up. Woops. Installed windows on my data drive.

bloodfart@lemmy.ml on 01 Jun 22:58 next collapse

You got a lot of responses, here’s some good ones:

@cyborganism@lemmy.ca wrote a good post that explains how to make an install usb from your existing windows

@TheAnonymouseJoker@lemmy.ml made a post about the wipe and reinstall method using a third party source and activation method

If you choose either of those ways, make a backup using the windows backup wizard. No matter how you choose to reinstall windows, having that backup lets you save your files and settings. Always have a backup!

I’m not gonna link them, but you got a lot of posts about using a second drive to install windows so that its update process doesn’t remove your ability to boot into Linux. Many people do that and there’s nothing wrong with it.

I think it’s better to let windows update mess up your bootloader and learn how to fix it (it’s always incredibly easy but the process varies slightly depending on your distribution). There’s no guarantee that windows update won’t mess up bootloaders on drives it isn’t installed on.

If I were you, and I could look into the future of what’s gonna work, speaking from a couple decades of experience, I’d make a windows install media or two, make a backup or two and pick a distribution to try off a live usb first then if I liked it, I’d install it dual boot so I could switch back to windows just by picking it when the computer starts up.

InternetCitizen2@lemmy.world on 02 Jun 01:22 next collapse

If you feel comfortable swapping out the drives on your computer that would be the easiest way. You can buy a cheap ssd to install linux on it. If you really hate it you can just switch back to the windows drive. This also helps you avoid dual booting.

cyberpunk007@lemmy.ca on 02 Jun 03:08 collapse

And if you don’t, you could just boot a live USB of Linux and some installers are capable of repartitioning your drive for dual boot.

But there’s always a small amount of risk to this, but I’ve never had an issue in my 25 years of doing it.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 02 Jun 02:24 next collapse

Don’t use “debloater” versions as that is a violation of the TOS and can create significant issues.

To install Windows just write it to a USB and then boot from the USB. Follow the on screen instructions from there

WQMan@lemm.ee on 02 Jun 06:15 next collapse

Use this tool to debloat your windows: github.com/builtbybel/privatezilla , also, I heard that setting your region as English (International) during installation comes with less bloat-ware installed?


Also, lookup tutorials on how to Dual Boot.

captain_aggravated@sh.itjust.works on 02 Jun 09:25 next collapse

It has been my experience that it is a bigger pain in the neck to install Windows. Something you can try is practice it in a virtual machine using something like VirtualBox.

abuttandahalf@lemmy.ml on 02 Jun 09:59 next collapse

When I first wanted to try Linux out I made a small 50gb partition for it. the logic was that this was the size of just one game and it was an entire operating system, so I wasn’t losing much. As I continued to use Linux I kept expanding that partition to correspond with the priority I gave the OS.

olafurp@lemmy.world on 02 Jun 10:28 next collapse

You can always reinstall Windows and the license is registered to the motherboard so it’ll be fine.

You could alternatively buy a hard drive and keep your entire windows system for later just in case. :)

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 01:10 collapse

I would buy a SSD

AliOski@feddit.nl on 02 Jun 11:09 next collapse

Do a dual boot, that’s what I did. If after some time you feel like the windows partition is unnecessary, delete it. If after deletion it suddenly seems to become necessary, it is always possible to reinstall windows, there are tutorials online on how to do that.

GrappleHat@lemmy.ml on 02 Jun 12:22 next collapse

If you’re nervous about the switch consider dual-booting. Then you’re not fully committed to the switch & you can have your old Windows system back whenever you want it.

Main steps are:

  • Run a defrag on your Windows machine to physically consolidate all your Windows data to one area.
  • Break that partition into two (Linux will go one the new empty side)
  • Install Linux from a USB as normal, but don’t choose to wipe your drive completely. Choose a manual option instead where you specifically indicate your intended Linux partition from above.
  • Optional: Once installation is complete you can set up another partition to hold files which can be available to both OSs.
    • Boot into Linux & define the remaining unused space in the Linux partition as a new NTFS partition & give it a name which makes it obvious what it is (i.e. “sharedspace”)
    • Then boot into Windows and move the existing data you’d like to share between OSs here (work documents, movies, music, etc.)

Some useful links:

PipedLinkBot@feddit.rocks on 02 Jun 12:24 next collapse

Here is an alternative Piped link(s):

Video on setting up a dual boot

Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.

I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.

KRAW@linux.community on 02 Jun 15:42 next collapse

I would argue that it is better to have two separate drives for the installation. It simplifies things for non tech savvy people, and I believe Windows has less of an opportunity to mess with your linux install, such as messing with the efi partition.

NutWrench@lemmy.world on 02 Jun 18:41 next collapse

Same here. I installed Linux Mint on my internal D: drive and left my Windows C: drive completely untouched. Then, I changed my boot order in bios to boot from drive D: This lets you play with Linux without messing with the bootloader on your Windows drive, or fiddling with partitions.

Once I decided to keep Linux, I modified the D: drive bootloader (“sudo update-grub”) so it would show both drives when I booted from D: Now I can boot into either OS without having to change the boot order in BIOS.

dRLY@lemmy.ml on 03 Jun 05:43 collapse

THIS all fucking day for new and even experienced users. Setting up a dual boot is fairly easy. But the moment you decide that you just need Windows (mostly new/non-tech users) and delete the Linux partition. Shit will break booting and lead to so much panic and/or frustration just getting Windows booting again. And that ignores the additional fuck-ups that can happen with just making a small mistake doing anything with partitions no matter the OS. It is much less frustrating to just disconnect the second drive in a desktop (or just format the drive and have as a data drive). Or to just swap one drive for another in a laptop with one drive bay/slot. Opening a laptop might be annoying depending on the model.

But at least your data and OS won’t be lost. Lots of people can understand using a screwdriver and spudgers while watching a video and some care. But lots of video and written guides for complex software can be worse. Lots of my frustrations with Linux guides over the years has to do with some steps being just left out due to the person(s) showing or writing it just assume certain steps as being super “obvious” or “common sense.” Though some folks are at least good at pre-facing stuff as assuming certain levels of knowledge. So it is easier to know that I might need to also research whatever they mentioned.

And if someone is experienced, it is still good to keep your OSes on physically different drives. Reduce the amount of problems that can come from a drive going bad and taking both (or however many) OSes down together. Of course backups are to be made for reasons that include a drive failing. But shit happens, and minimizing impact and the work needed to get everything working again is always a good idea. It is also nice to know that if you get the itch to distro-hop, you can just nuke the one drive without worry as much as you want. Keep your “I need to know this won’t be impacted” drive safe, and your play drive liquid.

possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip on 03 Jun 01:10 collapse

Dual booting is more complex and should be avoided if possible. If someone doesn’t like Linux they can just go back to Windows. I dual booted for years and I can say it was totally useless.

Pacmanlives@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 02:29 next collapse

So I will get some flack from this I am sure but my daily drivers since about 2004 are Linux I have always had a Mac laptop up to a few years ago in that time frame and Windows work laptops.

Honestly Windows 11 has a lot of nice creature features that KDE has had for a while and with WSL I can use a lot of my Linux commands. Can tell you how many times I have used egrep for things along with having native ssh built in. Powershell is a very powerful shell language especially if you want to go down the .Net rabbit hole but that’s not usually needed

Still my main desktop is Debian stable with distrobox for apps I need more modern versions of. But it’s not hard to switch back and forth

art@lemmy.world on 03 Jun 07:16 next collapse

If you want to test out Linux, try running a virtual machine instead. There are a few good free software programs to do this. VirtualBox used to be a good option. It’s a free and harmless way to dive into Linux.

oessessnex@programming.dev on 03 Jun 22:49 collapse

Just buy a new SSD to install Linux on. If you decide to switch back just plug the old one in.