?????
jeremy31: ok, ok, so that means /boot is not a ext4 partition. ok, in that case I have to do what exactly? I can't see the partition
RainMan28: it has to be 4k aligned
jeremy31: ok, that's what I thought. so you mean to just change the partition from ext4 to fat32?
RainMan28: yes
ok, then I'll do that and then go ahead and run fdisk -l and see what it says
thanks jeremy31
jeremy31: ok, so this should be a part of the backup? it still showed up as a separate disk.
RainMan28: I just used the terminal tool gparted, and you should see one unallocated or unallocated space
jeremy31: just unallocated or unallocated?
RainMan28: just unallocated
jeremy31: ok, I have that as well. I found it on /dev/sdb and /dev/sdb1
jeremy31: ok, so what do I do with these?
RainMan28: I am afraid I haven't any experience with Windows 10 as I never had any issues with it, for the rest Ubuntu is fine for me
jeremy31: ok, I'm in Gparted and I have a question before I begin. Is there any reason I shouldn't just use the Windows tool and backup my files, delete Windows, install Ubuntu again and restore the files from the Windows backup?
jeremy31: I've done it in the past with no issues, so I was wondering if there is anything specific about Windows 10 that makes it different?
RainMan28: you could try and do the backup with ubuntu tools
ok
jeremy31: when I try the restore with Ubuntu tools, I select "/dev/sda" and click "restore partition table" and it
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