the way i understand it hibernating an OS dumps ram to a file and powers off, so could it be possible to run two OSs “simultaneously” by alternating between hibernations?

  • Successful_Try543@feddit.de
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    5 months ago

    Yes, this works. However, you can not (or should not if you possibly could?) modify data on partitions mounted by the hibernating OS. If E.g.Windows and Linux are installed and Windows is hibernating, the NTFS partitions can only be mounted read-only under Linux.

    • (⬤ᴥ⬤)@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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      5 months ago

      yea i know i meant it as a way to speed up dualbooting. cos having to shut down an os to get to the other one is a bit annoying

          • YarHarSuperstar@lemmy.world
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            5 months ago

            May I ask, is there a reason you don’t use proton/wine instead of Windows? There’s lots of downsides to windows nowadays

            • (⬤ᴥ⬤)@lemmy.blahaj.zoneOP
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              5 months ago

              proton and wine are great but far from perfect.
              i wanted to play a small indie game demo just a few days ago, installed it through proton and it didn’t have audio. ran it through wine and that was even worse. the overhead of a vm is too much for my machine to run games well