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Removing grub makes windows faster/better?
grub rescue errorupdate-grub always removing windows EFI entryWindows 10 entry not listed on GrubCan't install Ubuntu 14.04.3 LTS on Windows 10Not showing GRUB in windows 10 dual bootGrub freezes when naturally booting, but works when selected from EFI menuBlack screen makes Grub and BIOS inaccessible after installing UbuntuRemove the grub menu after removing Windows dual bootGrub rescue after removing Ubuntu partitionRemoving extra option from Boot Manager in “Legacy Mode” after deleting Ubuntu (able to load Windows when boot mode = UEFI)
I've been experiencing a number of issues with UEFI laptops in the past years. I was always under the impression that, after installing an ubuntu partition and grub, the Windows 10 partition was seemingly slower to some extent, but I have never paid attention at that too much given that I was not having first hand experience and/or any way to test my assumptions.
However, I have recently bought a new HP Spectre x360, and I have installed Ubuntu on it. For the past two months, I've had countless issues with it, ranging from components not working properly (e.g. audio, keyboard, touchscreen, touchpad), to system taking forever to boot and having countless issues and crashes before logging in (DRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE was the main one; sometimes it took me 10 attempts at booting into Windows).
Now, in the process of sending it over to HP for repairs, I have cleaned up Windows, removed ubuntu and removed grub. And voilà!! No issues whatsoever. The laptop works like a charm, and I am yet to experience any single issue.
My question is: has anybody experienced something like this? Do you think it may be because I have done something wrong during installation? I have installed ubuntu on 100+ computers for the past 15+ years, but I admit that I haven't paid much attention at what's the best strategy to install on a UEFI laptop. Might that be the culprit? I also haven't found any hints online..it's usually Windows that messes up with ubuntu/grub, not the other way around!
boot dual-boot grub2 uefi windows-10
|
show 1 more comment
I've been experiencing a number of issues with UEFI laptops in the past years. I was always under the impression that, after installing an ubuntu partition and grub, the Windows 10 partition was seemingly slower to some extent, but I have never paid attention at that too much given that I was not having first hand experience and/or any way to test my assumptions.
However, I have recently bought a new HP Spectre x360, and I have installed Ubuntu on it. For the past two months, I've had countless issues with it, ranging from components not working properly (e.g. audio, keyboard, touchscreen, touchpad), to system taking forever to boot and having countless issues and crashes before logging in (DRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE was the main one; sometimes it took me 10 attempts at booting into Windows).
Now, in the process of sending it over to HP for repairs, I have cleaned up Windows, removed ubuntu and removed grub. And voilà!! No issues whatsoever. The laptop works like a charm, and I am yet to experience any single issue.
My question is: has anybody experienced something like this? Do you think it may be because I have done something wrong during installation? I have installed ubuntu on 100+ computers for the past 15+ years, but I admit that I haven't paid much attention at what's the best strategy to install on a UEFI laptop. Might that be the culprit? I also haven't found any hints online..it's usually Windows that messes up with ubuntu/grub, not the other way around!
boot dual-boot grub2 uefi windows-10
1
How much did you shrink the NTFS partition. Many Windows slow downs are because NTFS really needs 30% free to work well. And at 10% free do you not have much space to do a defrag. Otherwise Windows does not 'see' Linux partitions so it just about cannot be a Linux issue.
– oldfred
Mar 22 at 19:20
Great observation @oldfred . However, I have left 300GB in my windows partition (and more than 200GB are free), hence that's not the problem. Moreover, I am not experiencing slowdowns, but strange random hardware issues!!
– alecive
2 days ago
Do not know if any of these also had that type of issue. HP Pavillion X360 13-a220nw ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2359510 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2407615 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2406993
– oldfred
2 days ago
I was able to install ubuntu. Ubuntu works like a charm!! My problem is that, with ubuntu installed, windows works very poorly.
– alecive
yesterday
Should not be related, other than with fast start up off, Windows will boot a bit slower.
– oldfred
yesterday
|
show 1 more comment
I've been experiencing a number of issues with UEFI laptops in the past years. I was always under the impression that, after installing an ubuntu partition and grub, the Windows 10 partition was seemingly slower to some extent, but I have never paid attention at that too much given that I was not having first hand experience and/or any way to test my assumptions.
However, I have recently bought a new HP Spectre x360, and I have installed Ubuntu on it. For the past two months, I've had countless issues with it, ranging from components not working properly (e.g. audio, keyboard, touchscreen, touchpad), to system taking forever to boot and having countless issues and crashes before logging in (DRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE was the main one; sometimes it took me 10 attempts at booting into Windows).
Now, in the process of sending it over to HP for repairs, I have cleaned up Windows, removed ubuntu and removed grub. And voilà!! No issues whatsoever. The laptop works like a charm, and I am yet to experience any single issue.
My question is: has anybody experienced something like this? Do you think it may be because I have done something wrong during installation? I have installed ubuntu on 100+ computers for the past 15+ years, but I admit that I haven't paid much attention at what's the best strategy to install on a UEFI laptop. Might that be the culprit? I also haven't found any hints online..it's usually Windows that messes up with ubuntu/grub, not the other way around!
boot dual-boot grub2 uefi windows-10
I've been experiencing a number of issues with UEFI laptops in the past years. I was always under the impression that, after installing an ubuntu partition and grub, the Windows 10 partition was seemingly slower to some extent, but I have never paid attention at that too much given that I was not having first hand experience and/or any way to test my assumptions.
However, I have recently bought a new HP Spectre x360, and I have installed Ubuntu on it. For the past two months, I've had countless issues with it, ranging from components not working properly (e.g. audio, keyboard, touchscreen, touchpad), to system taking forever to boot and having countless issues and crashes before logging in (DRIVER_POWER_STATE_FAILURE was the main one; sometimes it took me 10 attempts at booting into Windows).
Now, in the process of sending it over to HP for repairs, I have cleaned up Windows, removed ubuntu and removed grub. And voilà!! No issues whatsoever. The laptop works like a charm, and I am yet to experience any single issue.
My question is: has anybody experienced something like this? Do you think it may be because I have done something wrong during installation? I have installed ubuntu on 100+ computers for the past 15+ years, but I admit that I haven't paid much attention at what's the best strategy to install on a UEFI laptop. Might that be the culprit? I also haven't found any hints online..it's usually Windows that messes up with ubuntu/grub, not the other way around!
boot dual-boot grub2 uefi windows-10
boot dual-boot grub2 uefi windows-10
edited 11 mins ago
alecive
asked Mar 22 at 16:57
alecivealecive
68110
68110
1
How much did you shrink the NTFS partition. Many Windows slow downs are because NTFS really needs 30% free to work well. And at 10% free do you not have much space to do a defrag. Otherwise Windows does not 'see' Linux partitions so it just about cannot be a Linux issue.
– oldfred
Mar 22 at 19:20
Great observation @oldfred . However, I have left 300GB in my windows partition (and more than 200GB are free), hence that's not the problem. Moreover, I am not experiencing slowdowns, but strange random hardware issues!!
– alecive
2 days ago
Do not know if any of these also had that type of issue. HP Pavillion X360 13-a220nw ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2359510 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2407615 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2406993
– oldfred
2 days ago
I was able to install ubuntu. Ubuntu works like a charm!! My problem is that, with ubuntu installed, windows works very poorly.
– alecive
yesterday
Should not be related, other than with fast start up off, Windows will boot a bit slower.
– oldfred
yesterday
|
show 1 more comment
1
How much did you shrink the NTFS partition. Many Windows slow downs are because NTFS really needs 30% free to work well. And at 10% free do you not have much space to do a defrag. Otherwise Windows does not 'see' Linux partitions so it just about cannot be a Linux issue.
– oldfred
Mar 22 at 19:20
Great observation @oldfred . However, I have left 300GB in my windows partition (and more than 200GB are free), hence that's not the problem. Moreover, I am not experiencing slowdowns, but strange random hardware issues!!
– alecive
2 days ago
Do not know if any of these also had that type of issue. HP Pavillion X360 13-a220nw ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2359510 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2407615 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2406993
– oldfred
2 days ago
I was able to install ubuntu. Ubuntu works like a charm!! My problem is that, with ubuntu installed, windows works very poorly.
– alecive
yesterday
Should not be related, other than with fast start up off, Windows will boot a bit slower.
– oldfred
yesterday
1
1
How much did you shrink the NTFS partition. Many Windows slow downs are because NTFS really needs 30% free to work well. And at 10% free do you not have much space to do a defrag. Otherwise Windows does not 'see' Linux partitions so it just about cannot be a Linux issue.
– oldfred
Mar 22 at 19:20
How much did you shrink the NTFS partition. Many Windows slow downs are because NTFS really needs 30% free to work well. And at 10% free do you not have much space to do a defrag. Otherwise Windows does not 'see' Linux partitions so it just about cannot be a Linux issue.
– oldfred
Mar 22 at 19:20
Great observation @oldfred . However, I have left 300GB in my windows partition (and more than 200GB are free), hence that's not the problem. Moreover, I am not experiencing slowdowns, but strange random hardware issues!!
– alecive
2 days ago
Great observation @oldfred . However, I have left 300GB in my windows partition (and more than 200GB are free), hence that's not the problem. Moreover, I am not experiencing slowdowns, but strange random hardware issues!!
– alecive
2 days ago
Do not know if any of these also had that type of issue. HP Pavillion X360 13-a220nw ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2359510 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2407615 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2406993
– oldfred
2 days ago
Do not know if any of these also had that type of issue. HP Pavillion X360 13-a220nw ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2359510 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2407615 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2406993
– oldfred
2 days ago
I was able to install ubuntu. Ubuntu works like a charm!! My problem is that, with ubuntu installed, windows works very poorly.
– alecive
yesterday
I was able to install ubuntu. Ubuntu works like a charm!! My problem is that, with ubuntu installed, windows works very poorly.
– alecive
yesterday
Should not be related, other than with fast start up off, Windows will boot a bit slower.
– oldfred
yesterday
Should not be related, other than with fast start up off, Windows will boot a bit slower.
– oldfred
yesterday
|
show 1 more comment
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1
How much did you shrink the NTFS partition. Many Windows slow downs are because NTFS really needs 30% free to work well. And at 10% free do you not have much space to do a defrag. Otherwise Windows does not 'see' Linux partitions so it just about cannot be a Linux issue.
– oldfred
Mar 22 at 19:20
Great observation @oldfred . However, I have left 300GB in my windows partition (and more than 200GB are free), hence that's not the problem. Moreover, I am not experiencing slowdowns, but strange random hardware issues!!
– alecive
2 days ago
Do not know if any of these also had that type of issue. HP Pavillion X360 13-a220nw ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2359510 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2407615 & ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=2406993
– oldfred
2 days ago
I was able to install ubuntu. Ubuntu works like a charm!! My problem is that, with ubuntu installed, windows works very poorly.
– alecive
yesterday
Should not be related, other than with fast start up off, Windows will boot a bit slower.
– oldfred
yesterday