Friday, February 12, 2010

Install Photoshop With Wine Osx Linux Setup Question?

Linux Setup Question? - install photoshop with wine osx

That's what I intend to do:

I have already installed Windows XP.
My plan is to install Ubuntu on a separate partition.
I use Ubuntu as my primary OS.
I believe in using VirtualBox (if you is not heard yet, Google it) to a virtual desktop with the Windows partition with Windows already installed software such as Photoshop and other programs can be created that virtualized and wine.
My plan is just the start of Windows, if there are certain things that VirtualBox is not good, as well as screen capture.
My plan is to make a backup of Windows, just in case.


What it sounds like this plan? Other precautions should I take? About what to install Unbuntu?

4 comments:

wuwei said...

Sounds good.
Except ... You can not installed with Windows already on the virtual machine. It must be the configuration from scratch :-(
With "Windows Backup" You mean an image file? This means the backup of a single copy of C: not enough!

You need to install Ubuntu on a partition of 3.4 GB, but to give a minimum of only 6 for growth.

A little advice from experience: It is very useful for the partition to use editor in the Ubuntu Live CD to create a root partition and swap partition before the actual installation. This way, you can search more precisely the size and partitions. Then, for the installation did you choose manual partitioning and installing Ubuntu in 2 partitions created earlier. You see, the easiest way.

As for the boatFrequency within GRUB. If you want to boot Ubuntu first, you leave everything as is. If you want to start by default in Windows, do the following:
Ubuntu Open a terminal and type:
sudo gedit / boot / grub / menu.lst
Near the beginning of the file entry named "Standard" with a single digit number is followed. Here are the messages that are with "title". The last title is usually the Windows Input.
Count all rows, subtract 1 and with the title. Enter the number in the upper back by default. For 5 lines with the title "4 seconds to the" default ". Save and Exit. I want to.

wuwei said...

Sounds good.
Except ... You can not installed with Windows already on the virtual machine. It must be the configuration from scratch :-(
With "Windows Backup" You mean an image file? This means the backup of a single copy of C: not enough!

You need to install Ubuntu on a partition of 3.4 GB, but to give a minimum of only 6 for growth.

A little advice from experience: It is very useful for the partition to use editor in the Ubuntu Live CD to create a root partition and swap partition before the actual installation. This way, you can search more precisely the size and partitions. Then, for the installation did you choose manual partitioning and installing Ubuntu in 2 partitions created earlier. You see, the easiest way.

As for the boatFrequency within GRUB. If you want to boot Ubuntu first, you leave everything as is. If you want to start by default in Windows, do the following:
Ubuntu Open a terminal and type:
sudo gedit / boot / grub / menu.lst
Near the beginning of the file entry named "Standard" with a single digit number is followed. Here are the messages that are with "title". The last title is usually the Windows Input.
Count all rows, subtract 1 and with the title. Enter the number in the upper back by default. For 5 lines with the title "4 seconds to the" default ". Save and Exit. I want to.

Colanth said...

Installing Ubuntu. Windows Backup with dd. You can use the image to restore Windows (all Linux installation), or simply mount the image to see a few files.

phenders... said...

Sounds good. Linux can be loaded into a logical partition size and in contrast to Windows startup. During the installation process of Ubuntu, you grub.lst the file, select the operating system is enabled by default when you start unattended.

Anyway, I Windows as a standard. You can also try OSX.
http://wiki.osx86project.org/wiki/index. ...
uphuck Google to 10.4 and 10.5 for Leo cough. DL, burning and booting. I 10.4.8

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