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How to make Windows and Linux get along together?
Good time of the day. There are two systems installed on the hard drive: Windows 7 x64
and OpenSuse Linux 13.2. The problem is the following. I will describe it step by step.
1. We turn on the computer, the bootloader starts, we select Linux, everything
starts up normally, everything works.
2. We reboot, select Windows, the system starts up, but neither
the keyboard, nor the mouse, nor USB react in any way (via PS / 2 too).
3. We urgently reboot using Reset, select Windows again,
select the "Normal boot" item, the system starts up, everything works
fine.
My colleague has exactly the same problem. The configuration of his computer
is completely different except for the chipset. Same Z97. When installing other
distributions, the picture does not change. I tried various options that the
great Google advised - all in vain. The support of Asus and the Soft Ones honestly said that they do not know what the reason is. Microsoft sent to Asus, and Asus sent to Microsoft. Actually the subject:
have you encountered similar problems, and if so, how to solve it?
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I read somewhere about this jamb, it seems on Habré, the reason was, it seems, not cleared RAM or something, until you de-energize the system unit, the problem remained.
1) Did you have these symptoms before you installed the second operating system?
2) Did you install updates on Windows?
3) Judging by the described symptom, the south bridge is lost, reinstalling the chipset drivers, conflicts / errors in the Windows log?
Let me guess: instead of a BIOS on a UEFI computer?
And the boot goes through the UEFI menu?
Demolish everything that is possible (if possible, it is better to completely disable all secure boot and UEFI modes by enabling Legacy) and install grub2!
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