You should at least give 1GB
Yes. There are two ways to do it. You can dual boot, which is installing both operating systems at the same time on the computer. When you start the computer, it'll ask you which operating system to boot. The other method is with a virtual machine. This will allow you to run the second operating system inside of the first one. It's much simpler to set up a virtual machine than it is to dual boot operating systems.
505lbs
There aren't any real "tricks" needed for installing Linux on a standard PCs; they pretty much all have a standard installation method. Some devices may not be supported in Linux, like some dial-up modems or wireless cards. These aren't really "gotchas", though, since they are easy enough to check before you make any changes to your hard drive.
That depends very much on the distribution and the method it uses for installing. Many modern distributions can be installed on only 32 MB of RAM using a text user interface. A LiveCD with a full desktop will often require far more, upwards of 768 MB or more.
Yes, very much. Linux is a developing and cutting edge OS.
pretty much anything that can run Linux and sendmail
May be kali will turned in demin because she is having so much skulls of demon in her neck as garland. Afeterall all these demon skulls will emphasize some bad effect on mind of mata kali.
quicker answer is which linux distro does not work? Pretty much all will work
The Linux will run on anything, PPC, x86, 64 bit, Cell Processor, soon the phantom processor, and the IPOD, XBOX, PS3, PS2, Wii, Nintendo DS,The structure of Linux is that it has a layer that interacts with programs, a layer that interacts with the hardware and there is not much I'm leaving out. With Windows there are so many virtual machines and other things involved it's crazy.Answerfrom top: 3. Applications2. Layer1. Kernel0. Hierachical file system
Linux is a free to download operating system, so it is difficult to put a specific value on it.
No. actually yes u can but it involves "hacking" it and installing Linux to it
There are a few methods you can use to run Ubuntu "on top of " Windows: 1. Virtual machines Virtual machines behave basically just like a real computer, except they run in a window. Running an operating system in one provides the best possible performance without dual-booting. Things like graphics acceleration will be extremely limited or non-existent, however. 2. Emulators Emulators like QEMU and Bochs can be used to run Ubntu on an emulated machine. This is much slower than a virtual machine, and is thus usually only useful for debugging or for running Ubuntu for a non-native platform, such as PowerPC or ARM. 3. Cooperative Linux (not recommended) Cooperative Linux runs a Linux kernel as a process on Windows. The reason I don't recommend this is because: A. It is more difficult to set up than the other methods. B. It is not supported by Canonical, and thus you cannot file bug reports. C. It will require installing several pieces of software (such as a terminal emulator and an X server). D. It has the potential for corrupting your Windows installation.