a authored by Alexander Douglas Yelovich's avatar Alexander Douglas Yelovich
......@@ -60,21 +60,13 @@ and hitting enter.
![Ubuntu Formatting](uploads/training/ubuntu-partition.png)
* Double click on the free space you created back in Windows (it should have a size around what
you specified)
* For size, enter twice the amount of RAM available in your computer (If you do not know,
type `Control-Alt-T` and then at the prompt type: `lshw -c memory`, then press Enter/Return. The memory entry is the
amount of RAM in your computer. Type `exit` to return to the original window).
* Choose Logical, and End of Space
* Use as: swap area (this is what Linux uses as temporary memory in the event
your RAM is full)
![Swap Partition](uploads/training/swap.png)
7. Repeat Step 6 with the following exceptions:
* For size just use the default entry (which should be the rest of the free space)
* Choose Logical and Beginning of Space
* Use as: Ext4 journaling file system
* Mount point: `/` (this is like the Linux equivalent of `C:` in Windows)
![ext4 Partition](uploads/training/ext4.png)
8. Continue and fill in account details, and then the installation should begin. Once it is done
7. Continue and fill in account details, and then the installation should begin. Once it is done
your computer should restart and then you should see a screen that looks like the start of the
installation. This is the GRUB bootloader. Whenever you want to boot into Ubuntu, select the
`Ubuntu` option, and whenever you want to boot into Windows choose the `Windows Boot Manager`
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