This is a tough one. The steam command doesn't seem to work. Theoretically though, dropping a newly burned DVD into a pot of boiling water may produce the desired effect.
Yes, it can be done from the windows installation disk, but it's cleaner if you remove ubuntu with the ubuntu live cd and then install windows.
Yes.
Yes - in the process of installing Ubuntu. If you want to format and nothing else, take a look at GParted (google).
trash -999 folder is created by ubuntu Linux live CD .If you delete some thing while running live CD of uduntu this folder is created ( may be recycle bin of ubuntu) by subash
trash -999 folder is created by ubuntu Linux live CD .If you delete some thing while running live CD of uduntu this folder is created ( may be recycle bin of ubuntu) by subash
Xubuntu and Ubuntu are two different versions of Ubuntu. (Ubuntu has GNOME.)
Yes, high pressure steaming is faster than atmospheric steaming
Before, the Canonical company was handling the shipping of free DVDs of various versions of Ubuntu. But now it has been stopped. So the Live/ Installation CD is halted officially , but you can download the Ubuntu ISO image from the site. See Related Links
You can remove the partition safely using a tool such as a gparted live cd. You need to burn the image to a CD-rom, boot from that, and remove the partition Ubuntu is installed to. Note: If you installed GRUB to the Master Boot Record of your hard disk, removing the Ubuntu partition could cause booting complications. These should be fixed upon reinstallation of Ubuntu.
Extremely easy with Live CD . Download and burn the ISO that you want on a CD. Put the CD in your PC and restart. Boot from CD . Choose to TRY Ubuntu and Try it with nothing affect your system. Notes : 1) Burn the ISO at the smaller speed. 2) Trying Ubuntu from Live CD is much slower than when install it.
Ubuntu is best, but then I'm biased, as my computers all run Ubuntu!
Ubuntu is a free, supported debian/linux implementation of Unix. As such, you can do nearly anything that you can do in Unix in Ubuntu.