09-17-2020, 12:39 AM
(09-16-2020, 09:57 PM)Steve5 Wrote: The contents of this section are hiddenYou have No permissions
Dual booting uses a second entry in the BCD. Each entry must have its own partition, but each disk can have multiple partitions. There's no need to use a second disk to dual boot. You can have multiple entries in the BCD, not just 2. Typically the order is newer OS to older, but if you plan on using a Linux partition, you want to install that first since the Linux bootloader is much more flexible and fully featured.