At least when it was first released, Wubi came with warnings not to use it in production environments. It was a method of test-driving X/K/Ubuntu running on a hard drive that would execute far more rapidly than burning a live CD and booting from the CD. The danger in using Wubi in production environments flows mainly from the fact that the entire Ubuntu system, including apps and data files, is all rolled up into a single virtual hard drive on the physical Windows drive, akin to what the old DOS "drive doublers" used to do. Great while it lasts, but if the file is corrupted, *all* of the data can be lost. And sectors do go bad on hard drives. If a bit is lost in the virtual file allocation table, you can be left up the creek without a paddle. Moral of the story: Wubi is demo-ware, an improvement of the live CD demo concept. Very nice for demonstrating Ubuntu, but if you want a dual-boot Ubuntu production system, your data is better protected if you install Ubuntu natively rather than using Wubi. Best regards, Paul E. ("Marbux") Merrell, J.D. -- Universal Interoperability Council <http:www.universal-interop-council.org> _______________________________________________ Blinux-list mailing list Blinux-list@xxxxxxxxxx https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/blinux-list