

If you first delete the current Ubuntu Budgie partition, the installer may offer to install Ubuntu alongside Windows, which will put it in the unallocated space that used to be the Ubuntu Budgie partition. If it detects your Ubuntu Budgie system, it may propose to replace it. The installer doesn't make things very difficult. I always try before installing, then start the installer from the live session. If you understand these things please assist. I don't want to pay them for a new version. I don't want to lose the windos sections because I don't have a way to prove it was the original OS on this machine. Ultimately I'm wanting to remove the Budgie sections, keep the Microsoft sections, and put the 20.04 LTS in the place where Budgie was. It probably is the Ubuntu Budgie OS and doesn't really need to be that big.Īnother question is what is UUID and why does partition 2 not have one?

How can I tell which is which? Once that is known, I want to know what the other is. One of those two must be for the windos storage. Here partition 3 has 99 GB and partition 1 has 105 GB. Everything else just popped in automatically. When I installed Budgie it listed the partitions with a slider mechanism that allowed me to shrink the windos partition to around 100 GB. I know that the 900 GB partition is the one I use in Ubuntu Budgie for file storage. We can see that the word Microsoft is listed in partitions 2 and 4. These were typed in the order they appear on the graphic.
GPARTED LIVE USB FOR MICROSOFT WINDOWS WINDOWS
Partition Type Microsoft Windows Recovery Environment (System) 105 MB FAT 32-bit-versionĬontents FAT(32-bit version) Mounted at /boot/efiĬontents Ext4 (version 1.0) Mounted at Filesystem Root I used the Discs utility to see the partitions. I want to get rid of Budgie and try the new LTS while keeping the existing windos. I've got an Acer Aspire One laptop running Ubuntu Budgie.
