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Posted Oct 05, 2008 at 5:01:44 PM
Subject: Problems installing Ubuntu
After hearing so much about it, I recently sent off for and received the Ubuntu 8.04.1 LTS Desktop Edition operating system.
I have a laptop Compaq series pp2140. 1.3GHz Athlon processor, 512Mb Ram, 30Gb Toshiba hard drive. Windows XP professional. I want to install the Ubuntu system along side windows XP.
Before hand I defragment the hard drive in Windows XP and made sure there was plenty of spare room on my hard drive. The laptops 30Gb hard drive is partitioned into two parts.
C: part which is holds the window xp operating system is 20Gb in total and has 11.8Gb free space.
D: part is 8.4Gb in size all of which is free space.
I booted my laptop with the Ubuntu CD in the tray and the Ubuntu operating system loaded and started correctly.
To install the system I followed the advise on the following site:
http://news.softpedia.com/news/Installing-Ubuntu-7-10-68645.shtml
I double clicked the install icon on the desktop. Proceeded through the first 3 steps without problem.
On the fourth step there are three choices on how to partition the hard disk.
[i]1. Guided – use entire disk.
2. Guided – use largest continuous free space.
3. Manual.[/i]
When I select the second choice as is recommended by the above guide I get the following error message:
[quote]
Failed to partition the selected disk
This probably happened because the selected disk or free space is too small to be automatically partitioned.
[/quote]
Is my hard disk too small to install Ubuntu? Any other advise on this would be helpful as well.
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Bob
Joined Apr 11, 2008 Posts: 93
Location:San Francisco, CA
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Posted:
Oct 05, 2008 8:32:36 PM
Subject: Problems installing Ubuntu
You should be OK with 8GB + of space, though this is at the minimum suggestion for 8.04. See: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/SystemRequirements
If the formatting of that empty 8.4 yields something a little less than the automated installation accepts (eg. 7.9?), you can always use the 3rd option of manual, and just specify that portion of the disk for all the choices (root, home). You should be presented with the partitioning tool with recommendations - the defaults should be good, but just check them.
If you still have issues, you could go with Xubuntu, a lighter version which is a little smaller.
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Glock24
Joined Aug 31, 2008 Posts: 42
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Posted:
Oct 06, 2008 3:32:28 AM
Subject: Problems installing Ubuntu
For a typical desktop installation, 8GB should be enough.
Select the manual partitioning, delete what is now D:, select the "free space" and then "new partition", set the size to 512MB, set "use as: swap space" and then hit "ok". Now select "free space" and "new partition" again, select "use as: ext3", "mount point: /", click "ok", the click "forward" and you are good to go.
The installer will probably cry about swap space being too low, just ignore that and continue with the installation.
Have fun.
[Modified by: Glock24 on October 05, 2008 08:33 PM]
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james
Joined Oct 01, 2008 Posts: 6
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Posted:
Oct 06, 2008 10:44:08 PM
Subject: Problems installing Ubuntu
Thankyou for the advise Glock24, most helpful. It worked and Ubuntu is up and running on my laptop.
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Glock24
Joined Aug 31, 2008 Posts: 42
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Posted:
Oct 07, 2008 4:55:35 AM
Subject: Problems installing Ubuntu
[quote=james]Thankyou for the advise Glock24, most helpful. It worked and Ubuntu is up and running on my laptop.[/quote]
Glad to hear that, I hope you enjoy it.
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