On Mar 3, 2011, at 6:38 AM, Always Learning wrote:
On Wed, 2011-03-02 at 19:18 -0800, Dr. Ed Morbius wrote:
It far and away already has. Dual-booting is a bastard compromise which forces you to select between altnernative OSs, doesn't allow for simultaneous access to features (and storage) of both, and generally necessitates use of some low-standard transfer storage partition (e.g.: vfat).
My dual-booting, actually tri-booting, with Vista (ugh!), Centos (brilliant) and Fedora 14 (not keen and a bit seriously buggy) allows me in Linux to access and change the file space content used by the other two operating systems. Surely that constitutes simultaneous access to storage?
If you are tri-booting, how are you accessing the file systems of the other OS's "at the same time"? Don't you have to reboot to change OS's?