If you have installed ubuntu with windows you uninstall it in the add remove programs.
The login screen appears automatically once Ubuntu has finished booting.
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.
Xubuntu and Ubuntu are two different versions of Ubuntu. (Ubuntu has GNOME.)
Yes, Windows 7 will overwrite the partition used by Ubuntu. In dual-booting, were two operating systems share the hard-drive (in separate partitions), you have a choice of either OS on boot-up. The recommended method is to install Windows first, then Ubuntu. Otherwise, if Windows is installed second it greedily takes over automatically at boot-up.
Yes Linux can be installed on the same computer.
When you boot from the install CD, indicate which partition you want Ubuntu installed on.
Ubuntu is an operating system and it is an open source software. This software could be installed on many devices including laptops, smartphones and tablets.
You can update Ubuntu later as well without any issues. ... If there are other operating systems installed, you may get the option to install Ubuntu along with them in dual boot. But since your goal is to only have Ubuntu Linux on your entire system, you should go for Erase disk and install Ubuntu option. Read More:- hands-on.cloud
In the last few versions of ubuntu, you can open the dash and search the name of the application.
Since Ubuntu is installed as an ext4 file system (not NTFS as in Windows), there is no need to defragment anything.
Ubuntu does not include Konqueror as standard, though it can be installed from the repositories. Its sister distribution, Kubuntu, ships Konqueror by default.
it really depends on what distro of Linux you would like. by far the most user friendly i have came across is ubuntu. www.ubuntu.com download the live CD and try it out, doesnt require install to test, but has install option on live disc. as a matter of dual booting to use windows and Linux, you can find information all over Google about that, or the ubuntu forums. i use ubuntu as a main OS, and i have not had windows installed since 2005, no need for it. check out the ubuntu forums for any help as well as their irc channel.