Windows may not boot after booting Linux from a USB due to potential changes in the boot order or bootloader configuration. When you boot from a USB, the system may prioritize the Linux bootloader (like GRUB) over the Windows bootloader. Additionally, if the USB installation modified the partition table or made changes to the EFI settings, it could prevent Windows from loading properly. To resolve this, you may need to restore the Windows bootloader or adjust the boot settings in your BIOS/UEFI.
If you have a USB drive and your BIOS supports booting from a USB device then try that.
Yes. Many Linux distributions can be easily booted from a USB Flash drive. With some modification, booting Windows XP is also possible.
Your question is rather cryptic. Do you mean Microsoft Windows, leading to dual-booting Windows and Linux? Please expand your question.
No. Windows does not (officially) support booting from a USB drive.
When it finishes booting. (Starting Windows\Mac OSX\Linux\Other)
Yes, and is known as a dual-booting computer. Install Windows first, then your chosen distribution of Linux (Ubuntu is one example). You will be given the choice of which to use at the start of booting up the computer.
Various distros have slightly different methods for booting and running from a USB Flash drive. You can find tutorials for many of these distros at the link below.
yes, A usb cable is the same as any other usb cable and will fit in any usb computer ports such as windows and linux.All usb ports are also the same size so you can use any usb cord for anything.
If one or of the operating systems does not cooperate well with dual-booting (such as Windows with a Linux distribution), then you should install the troublesome operating system first. If both are well-behaved (such as two Linux distributions) then it does not generally matter.
Dual booting means two operating system installed on PC. for example you install windows xp and windows vista at the same time. or windows xp and Linux on same PC. Dual booting is only a term you can install more than one operating system on one PC. for example you can install 10 windows xp copies on your 10 drives.
By dual-booting. You install them both to the same computer and choose between them at boot.
No. You can install a new version of Windows by running its setup program from within Windows itself, or by booting from the installation media (CD/DVD/USB drive).