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I am trying to create a partition on my Laptop through Windows Disk Management so I can install Ubuntu on a new partition using Wubi. However, I get a warning that says something like "If you make this a Dynamic Disk, you wont be able to boot installed OS'es from this disk" (Sorry, original is in Danish).

I am afraid to continue. Could it be that I get this warning because I already have 4 partitions? (Due to HP making them, grr).

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  • Are you trying to create a partition yourself. Or are you talking about something that pops up during the install process. I don't remember ever having to do anything manually using the WUBI installer.
    – Dennis
    Sep 23, 2011 at 12:31
  • trying to create it myself in Disk Management (as stated in the title :) )
    – Jeff
    Sep 23, 2011 at 12:35
  • Yeah, my bad, I saw that right after I commented, and answered based on your well stated title.
    – Dennis
    Sep 23, 2011 at 12:45

2 Answers 2

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It looks like at one time WUBI was trickier on Windows 7 however the latest on the wiki seems to indicate that it works normally now. In other words just use the WUBI installer and let it take care of everything. You shouldn't have to do anything with disk management. Typically for new users I work with, we will start with a persistent USB boot for a day or two to build interest, maybe a WUBI install for a week or two to see if they grow to love it, then a full dual boot (though many just leave Windows behind). I just mention these because all options are available depending on the level of commitment.
Other useful info may be found at
WUBI guide
Wikipedia entry

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    So no need for partitioning?
    – Jeff
    Sep 23, 2011 at 12:54
  • If someone tells me this is wrong and or dangerous I will delete it but in my experience this has always been the advantage of WUBI. It is created within a file on an existing file system. It has a few downfalls for long term use but I have installed and uninstalled several with no ill effect.
    – Dennis
    Sep 23, 2011 at 13:01
  • Cheers, accepting this! :)
    – Jeff
    Sep 23, 2011 at 13:09
  • +1, installing to an existing partition is exactly the point of Wubi. Sep 23, 2011 at 13:30
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    That isn't unusual, wireless is one thing that half the time (almost all Broadcom ) can need a driver. That is a different question and if you just start with Google using Ubuntu and Wireless you will get a bunch of hits. For me just going to the "Additional Drivers" app and letting it find and install them will work about 90% of the time.
    – Dennis
    Sep 23, 2011 at 14:10
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(I just answered a similar question...)

You're right about the four partition limit in legacy MBR.

Currently you are trying to create a fifth partition without having an 'extended' partition to put it into, and Windows cannot automatically convert existing partitions into logical ones, so it is offering to convert the entire disk into Microsoft's Logical Disk Manager partitioning scheme ("Dynamic disks").

Unfortunately, neither the GRUB bootloader nor grub4dos (used by Wubi) are able to boot from a 'dynamic disk'. You should reject the conversion offer, delete the fourth primary partition and create an 'extended' one in place of it. (The HP junk is okay to delete.)

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    You can also use third party software like Paragon Partition Manager that can convert primary partitions to extended ones. If your BIOS supports UEFI, you should also be able to convert the partition table scheme to GPT which will remove all restrictions. (Only do this if you're 100% sure your motherboard can boot from GPT.)
    – billc.cn
    Sep 23, 2011 at 12:47
  • @Grawity - I dont supposed the HP_TOOLS partition are necesarry then - however if I need to reinstall Windows, wont I need them? Like, HP has this wireless connection manager that is controlled by a touch element on my laptop.
    – Jeff
    Sep 23, 2011 at 12:54
  • @Jeff: You can backup the tools, and re-create the partition later. Sep 23, 2011 at 13:31

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