-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Tuesday 23 July 2002 04:24 pm, charlie bullen wrote: > A few months ago I went to a westside plug meeting where there was a demo > of installing linux in a windows directory. Is this possible if the disk is > formated with ntfs? Like the other guy said, yes and no. The method of placing the file system inside of a disk image and using that is available. However, I believe the boot procedure requires unprotected memory in order to install the Linux kernel. Since no operating system sports unprotected memory and the NTFS file system, you would never be able to boot your image. > I also can't remember which distro was used and how it was done so any > advice would be appreciated The distribution your probably saw was Lnx4win (Linux for Windows) by Mandrakesoft. It doesn't look like it has been updated in a couple of years, and there is good reason for that. I experimented for a while with the "file system within a file" setup, and the results were at least a dozen times slower than a dedicated partition. Disk I/O was simply too costly, and the boot-up time was horrendous. Your best bet is probably to either buy a second drive ($90 new if you shop around) or buy partition magic (which at $70 or so makes me turn back to option one). Sorry. - -- Voltage Spike ,,, (. .) - --ooO-(_)-Ooo-- -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.6 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iD8DBQE9PmP1pNoctRtUIRQRApHPAJwLLxW1eIJfgDpghGsjk8DUoV717ACfQC7j TFxT6WIC8vUcQiu+BNKNbCg= =vb0W -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----