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After trying to install both OS during 2 days, I'm confused and getting mad. I have SSD 128 GB and HDD 500 GB both empty. Xrgamedll dlya stalker zov pripyati fajl 1. My laptop is Asus K55VM. BIOS support UEFI. What I have done: • Install new SSD (Samsung 830 128GB) • Use GParted on liveCD to create new table of partitions (GPT) and create 3 partitions (in the SSD) for different purposes: • Partition 1: 80 GB (w7); • Partition 2: 30 GB (Ubuntu 12.04 -Just / -); • Partition 3: 10 GB unused (for future extesion of the other partitions) • Install Windows 7 (with UEFI) in Partition 1. This create: • /dev/sda1 -> 100 MB for System (UEFI boot I guess) - FAT32 • /dev/sda2 -> 100 MB aprox. For MSR • /dev/sda3 -> 79.800 MB aprox.
For Windows7 data In this point everything works fine. Now I install Ubuntu 12.04 amd64 (with UEFI) as follows: • Install / in Partition 2 -> /dev/sda4 30 GB ext4, and in the hdd I install /home and swap. • I select bootloader in /dev/sda1 (where it's supposed to be the UEFI boot).
• I install updates and reboot. Problem: Now just appears grub menu with Ubuntu entries and not Windows 7. Alternative solution found: When I turn on laptop, before loading GRUB I press ESC key and appear BIOS boot, so I can select to boot the Windows partition, Ubuntu partition, DVD, USB, etc. But I think is not the best way to boot different OS. I've tried: sudo update-grub2 with no success. What can I do?? Jarondl's solution is perfectly good, but another one is to use a separate boot manager program to select between GRUB and the Windows boot loader.
I know of three EFI boot managers you can install: •, which is available in Ubuntu's repositories. Note that the version from rEFIt's site won't work on UEFI-based PCs, since it uses a Mac-specific file format. Even Ubuntu's version has a number of minor glitches on UEFI-based PCs. Ideally, rEFIt presents a pretty GUI boot menu (although it's also got a text mode).
•, which is an updated version of rEFIt with fixes for the various UEFI glitches and extensions to work with a 3.3.0 kernel's built-in EFI boot loader. Note that I forked/maintain rEFInd. • gummiboot, which is a text-only boot manager.
(This site keeps forgetting who I am and refuses to let me post more than two hyperlinks as a result, or I would have provided one.) Both rEFIt and rEFInd auto-detect other boot loaders, so once you've configured them, they should detect any OS's boot loader and give you a menu. I've not yet tried gummiboot, so I don't know how simple it is to set up, but it's similar conceptually to rEFIt/rEFInd. Using any of these programs adds complexity to the boot process, so if GRUB works and you're happy with it, there's little point to using any of these programs. They're most useful if GRUB is temperamental or just plain doesn't work, as is often the case with GRUB 2 on UEFI systems, in my experience. Millimetrovka a3 2016. In such a situation, you can ditch GRUB 2 in favor of ELILO or a 3.3.0 or later kernel's EFI stub loader. These boot loaders can't redirect the boot process to Windows, making a separate boot manager very useful.
With a distribution that uses a 3.3.0 or later kernel, rEFInd can be very easy to maintain, depending on the configuration details.
Will someone at Nokia Development provide some kind of a matrix of Windows 7 compatibility for the most widely used Nokia software? I'd like to be able to plan for my Windows 7 upgrade properly, and it would help out if Nokia can provide information as to what current version of what Nokia software works with Windows 7, what doesn't, which future release is planned, and if each software can run on 64 bit Windows 7 as well. Currently, the Nokia software I run on my Windows XP are: PC Suite Nokia Software Updater Nokia Maps Updater Nokia Map Loader Nokia Car Kit Software Updater My current plan is to upgrade to Windows 7 64-bit, and I have accounted for every software and driver, and am ready except for the Nokia part of the story. Nokia's group of software is the only set that's holding me back.