Last I read the Windows 10 upgrade will be an in-place upgrade using the "Upgrade Windows" option in the control panel.
Sweeeeet!
Last I read the Windows 10 upgrade will be an in-place upgrade using the "Upgrade Windows" option in the control panel.
Next, you CANNOT just install a dual boot system on a UEFI BIOS device
This is not really true. I run Linux dual boot with secure boot on and it was simple. Windows 10 was simpler still. Please don't spread FUD.
Yes, I have been dual booting Win8 & Win10 TP on my SP3 since the first build.
I've strayed from my path!
thanks to this guy here : http://blogs.msdn.com/b/cesardelato...ws-8-1-update-natively-from-a-vhdx-image.aspx
I've now used Nativ Boot on a .vhdx Virtual Drive.
so i can start Hyper-V an use a VM whenever i am on windows8.1 or i can simply restart and boot native directly into this .vhdx
Now if i only knew if it would be possible to clone a .vhdx drive into a real partition.....
but performance wise it seems to be doing pretty fine
Normal Windows 8.1
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Normal Windows 10 Tech Preview Booted from a .vhdx Virtual Harddisk
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Win10 Tech Preview Running in a Hyper-V VM on Windows 8.1
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the only bad thing is that you can't have Hyper-V running AND have connected Standby at the same time
http://winsupersite.com/mobile-devices/surface-pro-3-tip-hyper-v-vs-connected-standby
Greetings
Haldi
I have just gotten a Surface Pro 3 i5 256GB SSD 8GB RAM model. I would like to create a new partition to keep the Win 8 partition to 80GB and then use the remaining space for a second OS installation - I plan to put my workplace enterprise installation on it. That way, I can use the enterprise OS for work, and then use the consumer installation for personal stuff.
Other option would be to put a second, personal profile on a single OS installation, though I'll be having kids playing games on it etc. so preference would be to completely separate work and personal accounts.
I've gone into Disk Management via Control Panel and I see 4 partitions: 360MB Recovery partition; 200MB EFI partition; 5.08GB recovery partition; 232GB primary partition.
Clicking on the C: primary partition, I go to Shrink Volume and would normally expect to be able to specify size, but only have the option to shrink 583MB. It includes a note "You cannot shrink a volume beyond the point where any unmovable files are located". I have defragged the harddrive (or rather whatever Optimise does in the Disk Clean-Up tool).
Is there any way to get this setup working? And what would the consensus be - smart move to dual boot like this or no?
I chose Native boot VHD for that reason.Not an answer to your question but have you thought about running your enterprise version of Windows in a VM instead of native install? That's probably how I would solve that particular problem. You'll loose Connected Standby with Hyper-V but you could install Virtualbox or VMware Workstation.
Please do outline what you remember and the people/ sources of help you used?I did not use FUD, @ahooper did. I had to look it up.
I am not an IT person and cannot outline all the steps off the top of my head. I had lots of help, mostly on other thread of this forum.