It is possible to install Linux on a Mac using Boot Camp but it can be messy.
Option 1: If you have Windows installed is to use the Wubi installer (See links below) to install Linux from within Windows.
Option 2: Use Boot Camp to create a Window partition. Boot from the Live CD, run Partition Editor, delete the Windows partition, Run the Installer and install into Free Space.
Option 3: Ignore Boot Camp. Run directly from a LiveCD or USB stick.
Option 4: Ignore Boot Camp. Run in Virtual Box.
Get the Linux bootable CD.then boot it on ur sys.go to setup wizard normally. At the tym of choosing the partition on the hard disk, select the option "install siden by side on windows" (I've applied this on my sys using ubuntu Linux)
You can. But the Windows installation does not put an entry into it's boot menu, so you have to manually copy a boot sector, and modify the boot menu so you can boot Linux. Linux distributions expect that you may want to dual-boot, so they detect Windows and set up an option for it automatically. For convenience's sake, it is far easier to install Windows first.
Dual-boot or multiboot.
Yes, although no modern distributions directly support system installs from them. You can still use a floppy disk to install Linux from a PXE boot server, from a CD that is incapable of booting from the BIOS, or from a USB Flash drive.
No, this used to be possible, but the mandatory automatic firmware updates Sony released block you from using the Yellow Dog Linux that was available for the PS3.
If you are using Red Hat 8 or more then install your Vega card and then boot into linux. Red Hat should automatically be able to configure it. If not then find out whether that Vega card is supported in the Linux that you are using. Also find out the driver of your Vega card for Linux .... from the manufacturer's web site.
Download the ISO images from Linux Mint's website, and burn it to a DVD or a flash drive and boot from it. Once it boots in a live session, on the desktop there is a icon named "Install Linux Mint" and click on it. Then follow the instructions and you'll be on your way to install Linux Mint.
No version of Linux is officially supported by Boot Camp. Assuming when you compile Linux From Scratch you include support for the Macintosh's hardware, it will work just fine when using Boot Camp to prepare the system.
If your referring to a computer than the system should boot itself after you install an operating system like windows, linux, or Mac Otherwise install a chameleon boot loader
Buy and boot from a Windows XP cd.
Install XP Install VMWare Client. If your CPU is 32-bit, get version 3. Download a Linux .iso Run VMWare to create a virtual machine running Linux Dual boot is old school.
install windows first and then install linux, there should be a partitioner in the live cd. or just use wubi