

Wish me luck - even if it doesn't work though, I now have a bootable OS on a 16GB flash drive which I will set up so that I can add progz and customization that will stay and be ready for repair of others computers. Damn yous, TrustedInstaller! I swear I gave myself full control the long, arduous way through Windows 10 and deleted it, but it's here. (Not even the self-claimed cutting-edge Fedora. Most Linux distribution isos don't even really work on UEFI systems booted from USB. I tried to make them work alongside, but I didn't succeed. I tried changing the properties, and I swear I was able to delete that folder, but there it is again, taking up 10% of my main drive! Thank you again, even if this doesn't work, I have another computer I am working on with the same chipset (not that *that* matters in this case) and I can use that to delete the damned folder. Vamos a explicarte cmo instalar GNU/Linux junto a Windows 10 en un ordenador, de manera que puedas elegir utilizar cualquiera de los dos sistemas operativos. an SSD instead of an HDD GPT partitioning scheme instead of MBR USB to boot from instead of optical disks. Simpler than dual install and has none of the unwind issues. I don't have UEFI, so I am hoping this will work so I can delete that pesky Windows.old file taking up precious real-estate on my (new, old one died) boot SSD. IMHO, it’s the best way for a Windows user to try Mint. Thank you, by the way! For some reason, I tried using Windows ISOs burned onto USBs using Rufus and even burning DVDs, but they would not give me the prompt nor even show up properly in the BIOS. Linux Mint 18 is out now, not that it matters too much, but I thought I would remind you of this article in case you wanted to edit it.
