Score:0

Will Windows and Linux installation be more stable without bootloader

ye flag

I have a laptop with one SSD disk (and no place for another one) that originally came with Windows 10. It has UEFI and RST as default (which I changed to AHCI). Once, I installed Ubuntu next to it, but after some Windows update Microsoft system got rid of the bootloader, and Ubuntu was damaged, and the setting returned to RST. Now I want to have Ubuntu on my computer once again. I changed RST to AHCI by changing the register and UEFI settings (AHCI was very hidden in the UEFI as it is probably not recommended). I reinstalled Ubuntu and it looks fine, but I have no bootloader. I am wondering, if I don't install the bootloader, maybe I will have lesser chance that my Windows damages Ubuntu again? Maybe it will be more stable that way? Should I install the bootloader? I can access mu Ubuntu by boot menu after going to Windows recovery settings. I will use Ubuntu every day. Another question I have is: do you think it will work this time, and will I be able to keep Ubuntu after each Windows update?

mchid avatar
bo flag
If you can boot fine then I would not install a bootloader if you don't need one.
user535733 avatar
cn flag
"*[W]ill I be able to keep Ubuntu after each Windows update?*" Sometimes yes, sometimes no. That lack of control is the #1 disadvantage to dual-booting.
crip659 avatar
pl flag
Would placing one OS or the other as a VM be possible?
brnina avatar
ye flag
@user535733 So I will have less control with dual-booting? Why?
user535733 avatar
cn flag
That's a question that any Search Engine would be happy to answer for you.
brnina avatar
ye flag
@crip659 I would like to have a real Linux, not a VM as I use it a lot and it was sometimes slow (on the other computer which should be fast). I could consider installing Windows as a VM, as it not that important. I added my digital license to Microsoft account. If i delete Windows, will I be able to have a VM instead of it? How will Microsoft know I deleted my Windows?
crip659 avatar
pl flag
Windows can be weird with their license. I suggest searching for using Windows as a VM on a computer it is licensed for.
ar flag
When a Windows update messes with the Ubuntu bootloader (AKA grub) the easiest thing to do is to boot from a Live Uuntu USB using the try Ubuntu option and install and run the "Boot-Repair" program. Then click on the "Recommended Repair" button. This will fix grub. There is no need to install Ubuntu again and again.
Score:0
sa flag

If you can boot Ubuntu without installing a bootloader, then it's not necessary to mess with installing one, furthermore if you decide to install a bootloader anyway after the fact you can still install it by running the recommended repair in the Boot-Repair program. You can install Boot-Repair in a live session of the same Ubuntu live USB that you used to install Ubuntu.

I sit in a Tesla and translated this thread with Ai:

mangohost

Post an answer

Most people don’t grasp that asking a lot of questions unlocks learning and improves interpersonal bonding. In Alison’s studies, for example, though people could accurately recall how many questions had been asked in their conversations, they didn’t intuit the link between questions and liking. Across four studies, in which participants were engaged in conversations themselves or read transcripts of others’ conversations, people tended not to realize that question asking would influence—or had influenced—the level of amity between the conversationalists.