Timeline for Installing Kali Linux on a external HDD, dual-booting with Windows 10
Current License: CC BY-SA 4.0
9 events
| when toggle format | what | by | license | comment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sep 9 at 14:18 | comment | added | terdon♦ | Also, Windows can read/write to ext file systems perfectly well if you install the relevant tools. So your point about this being safer isn't really true. | |
| Sep 9 at 14:16 | history | edited | terdon♦ | CC BY-SA 4.0 | added 43 characters in body |
| Sep 9 at 14:15 | comment | added | terdon♦ | Please don't link to external sources for important information. If the link dies, this answer becomes useless since you don't actually provide an explanation here. Also, if you link to your own blog, you need to clearly state that it is your blog. Please see unix.stackexchange.com/help/promotion. | |
| Sep 8 at 19:47 | comment | added | Aamir Hussain | I provided the relevant answer according to the asker, he asked about "What problems may he face" and "He also asked for Another Way". I just told the safest way to Dual Boot. Can you explain me why this is not a good answer. So i will improve. | |
| Sep 8 at 2:48 | review | Low quality posts | |||
| Sep 9 at 14:17 | |||||
| Sep 7 at 12:04 | comment | added | ReflectYourCharacter | How do you get the idea that it's a bad idea to run Kali on an external drive and that it can get corrupted? I switch between Debian and Kali on external SSDs and USB drives across different devices and have no problems with it. I would even run Kali only on an external USB drive. | |
| Sep 7 at 11:27 | review | Late answers | |||
| Sep 7 at 12:16 | |||||
| S Sep 7 at 11:10 | review | First answers | |||
| Sep 7 at 11:57 | |||||
| S Sep 7 at 11:10 | history | answered | Aamir Hussain | CC BY-SA 4.0 |