this post was submitted on 16 Aug 2025
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This was about a laptop and they rarely have multiple drives. Anyway, if the OS's are on separate drives that's not really dual boot. Dual boot means the boot loader lets you choose a partition to boot. Maybe it works better now than back in the day, idk, I don't run Windows any more.
GRUB absolutely takes partitions from other physical drives, and so do many other bootloaders afaik.
So, you can choose the OS to boot as normal as you start up your computer. Just install virtually any modern Linux distro after you install Windows or if you already have it installed. The rest will be done automagically.
And in my experience, most laptops with a single drive can accommodate a second one. But YMMV for sure.