[-] svenjoypro@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Could this be somehow combined with salt water, so the evaporated water would then be drinkable?

[-] svenjoypro@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks for the response.

you can try copying the Windows boot sector byte for byte from the swapped out disk to a partition on the new disk

How would I go about doing this? Macrium Reflect?

13
submitted 1 year ago by svenjoypro@lemmy.world to c/linux@lemmy.ml

I had multiple disks in my PC, one with Windows and one with Linux. The drive with Linux had the boot record I guess; I removed and replaced that one with a new disk and again installed Linux on it (so the Windows disk has been the same the while time), but I can no longer log into Windows while this new disk is installed and the old disk is removed. I can log into Linux while the new disk is installed, and if I swap back to the old disk I can log into Windows.

How do I fix things so I can not into Windows or new Linux while the new disk is installed? I don't mind reinstalling my Linux OS, but I really don't want to reinstall Windows.

1

With SPY's average ~5% return rate, does it make sense to invest in companies like SJT, MPW, PXD, etc that have over 10% dividends? Companies like ORC which have like 18% dividend, but the underlying stock price continues to fall more that 18% are traps sure, but SJT, MPW, PXD and others that have a decent track record of not losing much (or even gaining) value seem like good investments.

Am I missing something?

svenjoypro

joined 1 year ago