Does having Linux and Windows on seperate drives mitigate this issue somewhat?
Wanting to start dual booting and moving to windows. Wondering if that helps at all.
Edit: I meant moving to Linux... >.>
I keep Linux and windows on separate disks, grub or windows boot manager don't know about each other.
I have the Linux disk as the primary boot, if I need to boot into windows i use the bios boot selection screen.
It's a bit of a pain at times(have to mash F12 to get the bios boot menu) bit it's less of a headache than trying to fix grub
I'd only use windows for gaming really, wouldn't running it in a VM be less optimal in that vase? In terms of performance of windows and playing fames within the VM.
Do you think I can program on a Windows VM? Do you work with it? I still use Windows because I need my programs to work on Windows (had my programs built on Linux fail on Windows Machines before). Do you have experience on this?
That wouldn't be about the VM but the OS. If the software is built to target linux without care for portability then it'll fail on windows - you'd have to compile it targetting windows, either using the Visual Studio compiler or MinGW's gcc, be it native for windows under MSYS2 or using a cross-compiler variant.
Not on my experience. But separate machines would work, if Microsoft never releases a "Wi-Fi network security patch for compatibility with all machines".