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In this installation answer session for dual-booted desktop with two separate

SSDs, the required procedure will be fully explained in detail. The act of
plugging and unplugging of SSDs from their sockets for dual-boot installation
were discouraged and completely condemned because that act was going to
harm your computer hardware This act of plugging and unplugging of SSDs
have been practiced by a few just to avoid "an extraneous GRUB entry is being
installed on the EFI Boot Partition of the Windows 10 SSD". It is wiser to
attempt to remove such an extraneous GRUB entry instead of practicing this
'harmful' method of dual-boot installation. The removal of this extraneous
entry is the role of Part-IV of this answer-session. Plugging & unplugging SSDs
may cause neighboring components connection issues and your computer
may not start or malfunction and is difficult to diagnosis. While unplugging SSD
with tight socket fittings, you may apply force which may disturb the other
parts of Motherboard and there will be always the possible of creating loose
connection. i.e. if you work on one component and if you are little careless,
you may disturb others. I did once a blunder and my front-panel audio and USB
ports were stopped working. It took me days to identify the problem and
resolve it. It was simply a loose connection. If you have not properly plugged
SSD back into socket tightly, this will create a situation which is hard to
diagnosis because computer will work sometimes and suddenly there will be
malfunction. May be read/write errors and so on. When you install Windows
on a fresh hard drive, the installer sees your disk as a bunch of unallocated
space. You need to create a segment so the operating system knows what part
of the hard drive it can use. A standard Windows installation might have a
single partition that holds everything, including the OS files, your personal
data, installed programs, and more. If you bought a computer off the shelf, it
might also have a secondary small partition for recovery purposes. This is
separate from the main partition so that even if your Windows installation
becomes corrupted, you can still restore it with the backup partition. Backing
up your files is vital. While putting files on a separate partition isn’t an actual
backup, it can make your backup scheme much simpler. Like with your
Windows installation, you can clone the entire partition to have an exact copy
of its data. For a simpler approach, you can point your backup app to protect
the entire drive, instead of having to pick and choose individual folders.
Partitioning your drive can also keep your data safer from malware attacks. If
ransomware lands on your Windows partition, it would have a lesser chance
of locking your personal files on another partition. You can easily reinstall
Windows per above. Maybe you’re someone who loves to put everything in a
certain place. Partitioning lets you add more dividers between data types.
Perhaps you’d like to create a partition for games and apps and another for
documents, music, and similar files. If you find that the organization methods
available to you on a single partition aren’t enough, adding new ones could
help keep your data straight. Another multi-platform use for partitioning is to
work with multiple file systems. While you probably don’t need to do this with
your internal drive, it makes external drives more useful if you use them with
multiple OSes. One of the biggest hassles, when you have several partitions is
keeping them straight. With any more than three or four partitions, you’ll likely
lose the organization benefits just trying to keep track of them.
Operating System

PARTITION, DUAL
BOOTING IN
WINDOWS 10 AND
UBUNTU

By:
Vincent oj B. Olviga

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