this post was submitted on 07 Oct 2025
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I'm on Linux everywhere at home except for my lounge family PC. It runs windows and Linux, but boots in to windows by default. That way when my kid or friends/family are using it, it's familiar to them, but when I use it, I can boot it in to linux.
It's not even true dual booting. Rather, they're each installed on their own dedicated drives, and I jump in to the bios to boot from Linux when I need it. It means they don't really even have to coexist and break each other's installs