I dual boot because windows 11 is my gaming OS and windows 10 is for my internet radio software. I decided to seperate them to avoid issues while I am on air.
You can also change the boot options from the ‘Choose an Op System’ page. The text ‘Change Defaults or choose other options’ (bottom) are clickable and let you change the defaults (delay in seconds, default system, etc) or do something else (ie shutdown).
I’m not sure whether Windows 11 upgrade is a smart thing to do since I see many people complaining about AMD processors dropping performances and also people saying it has a lot of bugs. It’ll be a hassle for me to reconfigure everything as I use 2 profiles. I just learnt how to partition my drive and was wondering if it’s possible to try windows 11 because I know you can boot from a separate drive. I might try this.
Windows 11 has a built-in X server thats should perform a lot better that third party options. I am exploring the possibilities of docker with regards to running Windows GUI applications from inside (linux) containers in order to replace my current (more resource intensive) VM solutions.
I need to be testing things in Windows 11 but it’s not stable enough to be ready for everyone to be using it yet. I’m yet to find anything business related that Windows 11 will do that Windows 10 won’t do better.
5 Responses to “How to dual boot Windows 10 and Windows 11”
I dual boot because windows 11 is my gaming OS and windows 10 is for my internet radio software. I decided to seperate them to avoid issues while I am on air.
You can also change the boot options from the ‘Choose an Op System’ page. The text ‘Change Defaults or choose other options’ (bottom) are clickable and let you change the defaults (delay in seconds, default system, etc) or do something else (ie shutdown).
I’m not sure whether Windows 11 upgrade is a smart thing to do since I see many people complaining about AMD processors dropping performances and also people saying it has a lot of bugs. It’ll be a hassle for me to reconfigure everything as I use 2 profiles. I just learnt how to partition my drive and was wondering if it’s possible to try windows 11 because I know you can boot from a separate drive. I might try this.
Windows 11 has a built-in X server thats should perform a lot better that third party options. I am exploring the possibilities of docker with regards to running Windows GUI applications from inside (linux) containers in order to replace my current (more resource intensive) VM solutions.
I need to be testing things in Windows 11 but it’s not stable enough to be ready for everyone to be using it yet. I’m yet to find anything business related that Windows 11 will do that Windows 10 won’t do better.