As for the size concerns, Windows 10 wants 16G minimum, and openSUSE says 5G minimum recommended for graphical install, which is probably due for revision. Anyway, it'll be tight, but is not a problem to share 128GiB drive with both Windows and Linux. It just takes some planning about what you're going to use each of them for. The more cloud or NAS dependent your work is, the less of a problem this will be. Another option that saves space is to choose a primary OS and then put the other one in a VM. This is a bit tricky, but the license supposedly allows you to *install* one instance of the software on the hardware, either baremetal or VM. The trick will be whether you go down the OVMF rabbit hole to get the Dell OEM Windows to run (it's UEFI only) or if you figure out how to get non-OEM Windows from Microsoft and feed that to a conventional BIOS VM. I personally prefer virt-manager for this but gnome-boxes works also. So it really depends on your use case, what what rabbit holes you do and don't want to go down. Chris Murphy -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org