Ubuntu – Dual Booting Windows 7 and Ubuntu 12.04. Partition Sizes

12.04dual-bootinstallationpartitioningwindows 7

I'm about to reinstall Windows, so I thought that I'd try Ubuntu out on a partition just for fun.

My question is, how large should my partitions be for each of them? I know this various depending on what you use, so i'll give you a general idea of what I have, and what I have in mind.

I'm currently running:
Windows 7 Professional (64bit)
RAM: 4GB
CPU: 2.5Ghz Quad Core processor
HDD: 500GB
GPU: 1GB Nvidia GeForce

I have around 130GB in Steam games, and some heavier applications like Photoshop CS6, Sony Vegas Pro 11. But other Applications I use are:

Chrome
Skype
Dxtory
Fraps
OpenOffice
BitTorrent

and other assorted smaller programs.

So, I was thinking that I would give my Windows partition about 150-200GB, my Ubuntu Partition around 20GB, and the rest to shared storage. I'm not really sure if I'd need more or less on Ubuntu, because I've never used it and I'm not really sure what kind of apps i'd be using over there.

This would also be a clean install, so I'd be wiping my HDD, creating the Partitions in GParted, then installing Windows with Ubuntu following that.

Any critique you could give me? Maybe explanations to what the /root, /boot and /home partitions I hear are about?

Thanks in advanced if you actually read this lengthy thing! Any help is appreciated. (x

Best Answer

Okay, you have 500 Gig hard drive space to start, and you are definitely going to give Windows at least 150-200 Gig?

I'd actually say to give Ubuntu anywhere from 35 to 50 Gig, if you're planning on using it a lot. As for the file sharing, Ubuntu can access the Windows partition as if it were an attached hard drive (you get read-only access if Windows is hibernated, though,) and it's not implausible to access your Linux partition from Windows (I haven't tested it, but I assume that the Hibernation restriction goes both ways.)

If you're okay with Ubuntu messing around with the Windows partition, and you don't mind having an extra program on Windows, then I would actually recommend allocating 300 or so to Windows, and the other 200 to Ubuntu. (then use the Ubuntu partition for downloading HD TV shows via torrents. >:D Just kidding, by the way. ;)

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