Author Topic: How do I uninstall Linux Ubuntu?  (Read 1662 times)

at first I thought this post made sense
Now that I hadn't quoted him and he fixed it it gets really confusing.

Try booting into Windows if you have it installed. Or another operating system installed.
Assuming you're trying to change partitions under a Windows operating system, the partition won't show itself because Windows isn't able to recognize the format of the partition. (ex. ext2, ext3, ext4)
Okay? So how should I remove it?
I used Wubi, btw.

Okay? So how should I remove it?
I used Wubi, btw.
Go to control panel, add or remove programs (Or whatever it's called) click ubuntu, delete

What Soukuw said, use control panel and remove it

What Soukuw said, use control panel and remove it
Wait so what you're saying is when I uninstalled Ubuntu a year ago I could've just done that instead of frustrate myself to hell and waste 6 hours of my life trying to get Ubuntu to go away?

Wait so what you're saying is when I uninstalled Ubuntu a year ago I could've just done that instead of frustrate myself to hell and waste 6 hours of my life trying to get Ubuntu to go away?

If you installed it through Wubi, yes.

If you installed it through Wubi, yes.
Facepalm
I hate partitions

Partitions are easy as hell the only confusing part is the file system and even that can be figured out very easily with a quick Google search.

Why would somebody uninstall the greatest operating system in the world?

Why would somebody uninstall the greatest operating system in the world?
cause it doesn't work well and is taking up space?

cause it doesn't work well and is taking up space?

You haven't used it so you can't say whether it works well or not.


Its installed on E: and uses 321,94 GB of space.

People should really start using Wubi when installing Linux alongside Windows... -_-

Wubi screws up everything though.

Also, why would you install any GNU/Linux distribution alongside Windows?
Why not just replace Windows?

im guessing your did this for tf2?

You haven't used it so you can't say whether it works well or not.
um, yes he can? OP said it wasn't working well on his PC, so that's probably what he was referring to

Everything works fine, but Ubuntu doesn't do to great on my PC. That's why I want to get rid of it.