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  • OP, please don't let the other users scare you off. I've installed Linux dozens of times on dozens of different computers and have never once lost data while doing it, not unless I explicitly choose the option installer telling it there was nothing I wanted to keep (which is labelled "DANGER - YOU WILL LOSE DATA" in red letters). Linux Mint installer has an option to let you keep your existing OS and install Linux alongside it in a "dual-boot" configuration. This means that when you install, you permanently set aside a portion of the capacity of your boot disk (hard drive, SSD etc.) for use by Linux. The total capacity of your Windows partition will shrink by that much and Linux will live in a new partition in that space (e.g. if you have a 1TB SSD and set aside 250GB for Linux, from then on Windows will start seeing your C: drive as being 750GB large and Linux will have a brand new 250GB volume as its equivalent of the C drive). You can change how much space each OS has down the line, but it's really annoying and requires you to boot off a flash drive and not be able to use your computer for several hours while it rearranges its data.

    After that, each time you turn your computer on, you'll be asked whether you want to boot into Windows or Linux. (This will come in very handy if Linux borks itself and you need something working to be able to Google for solutions and use your computer as a computer until you can figure out how to fix it. Or if you decide down the road that the Linux way of doing things just gets under your skin and you want to go back to how your computer was before.) While booted into Linux, you'll be able to access all the files on your Windows C: drive as though it were an external drive, but not vice versa. If you want to send files from Linux to Windows, you'll have to boot into Linux and copy them over. Note that from the perspective of any apps you install on either OS, your Windows and Linux partitions are two totally separate computers, so expect to be asked to sign in again.

    All that said, having backups is never a bad idea if you can afford it. If you can't, a surefire way to keep Linux installer from erasing your Windows files is to put two SSDs in your machine, one for Windows and one for Linux, and disconnect the Windows one until you've finished installing Linux. This is what I usually do, and as a bonus gives more space for both OSes, although it's by no means necessary.

  • Back up your data before hand.

    You can use gparted on your mint live session to resize the windows partition to minimal size, leaving the biggest empty space possible. Leave 500mo to the windows partition as a safety net.

    Then during the install process :

    • choose manual install (not install on a full drive),
    • create an ext4 partition for the system (30 to 50 go) with a "/" mount point. It's the system partition.
    • create a "swap" partition (size = your computer ram x 2). It's the physical memory partition.
    • last create an ext4 partition (all remaining space) with a "/home" mount point. It's the personal data partition.

    Once the install completed you will be able to access your windows data from mint.

  • Your personal files? Back them up onto an external drive in Windows and then copy them into your home directory after installing Linux.

    If it's app data also copy it into an external drive and import it into the apps after installing them on Linux. Depending on the app they may have cloud sync options you can use too.

  • Step 1: "Unlearn" everything you learnt about technology and pcs as a whole and embrace Linux with a open mind.

    Step 2: Kill the bad habit (that only Windows gives you) of expect everything to "just werk" and to "solve" all your problems with left clicks. Yes, that is a bad, terrible habit and should not be accepted/be a daily habit for you and no sane user out there.

    Step 3: Nah, you'll lose everything -- just YOLO it.

33 comments