"der.hans" wrote: > > > Will people understand that they have to give up some > > or all of their Windows space, that Linux can't just > > be installed "under" Windows? Just a quick point. Technically, you can install Linux in the Windows partition with what Redhat calls a "partitionless installation". You dedicate a chunk of disk space to a container file that becomes your Linux filesystem. The performance _really_ bites, and you tend to need a boot floppy. It's possible tho'. -- one more For dual-booters, it'd be Handy if they prepared ahead of time by cleaning up disk space and running defrag under Windows. Since users tend to never ever do disk maintenance this can take a substantial chunk of time to complete. Windows scatters and fragments files all over its partition space when allowed to. It'd also be handy to have a supply of floppys on hand for a pre-install partition table backup - in case things don't go well (the whole "bootable floppy with the partition table file and RESTORRB.EXE" or whatever). Steve