It involved, from the command line, listing and selecting the detected hard drives, listing the partitions on the hard drive, then, finally, listing and deleting the target folder. Ultimately, it didn’t, but I figured out how to delete GRUB files from inside Windows 10, from the command line. So I thought that If I could just delete the ubuntu folder from the Boot EFI folder, that the installation would complete – successfully. After several failed attempts to dual-boot Ubuntu 15.04 and Windows 10 on a single hard drive and on a computer with UEFI firmware, and not knowing what caused the first failed attempt, I figured that subsequent failed attempts must have been due to an existing Ubuntu GRUB folder in the Boot EFI folder.Įspecially since the machine always froze when the installer is attempting to install GRUB
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