OK, you now have an idea on how partitioning works and the different ways of installing Ubuntu on your PC. So lets go ahead and install.
You will need to boot up off the CD to follow the steps (either on your real PC or virtual PC). Once the desktop loads its time to hit the Install Icon on the desktop and you should see something like this:

Select the Language you wish to use and hit forward: You will see:

Select your time zone: Please note – you can ZOOM in to help click and select your area: then hit forward.

Select your Keyboard Layout and hit Forward:

Now this is the Part that you need to know what you are doing. If you are using a virtual machine this is what it will come up with above: it is OK to leave the defaults as is to let the install allocate the right settings. You can play around more if you have a dedicated hard drive and want to allocate different sizes to different mounts/folders. Here are a couple more screen-shots from different environments:

This above is a dedicate Hard drive allocating 3.5 gig automatically to it:

Above has 2 physical discs: 1 40 gig seagate IDE hard drive and 1 60gig western digital SATA hard drive, hence the /hda and /sda

The re-size option above allow you to re-size a drive for you, so you can allocate a part of a drive to linux, leaving the rest as is. This is handy for very large drives or a pc that only has one hard drive and you want to share it with windows (dual boot). Moving the slider sets the partition size. So whatever above is your setup, hope this helps to understand how it all works.

Now this is a new feature on Fesity, but to be fair, I have only seen it work once. I have only seen it work when you re-size the Master C for windows and share it with Ubuntu. What is does is scans the local drive c for account and settings and helps you migrate over the information from your windows profile. I personally would not recommend it. Just think – all the crappy windows issues coming over too? If you have seen this work and work well, please let me know how and what it did. I would just leave this and click forward.

This is where you create you initial account: Choosing a name, desired log-in name, password and then password again, an a PC name. Then Hit Forward:

This is now the FINAL page, giving you a heads up on what is about to happen, what drives are going to be re-sized,wiped and configured. The regional settings and language, after you hit INSTALL, there is no turning back. So are you sure you backed up? Hit Install.

Now it runs through the install process:

When you get to this screen, you are all done: Select Restart now (hold thumbs) and wait for the System to start up. Take note: by default if you are using a Dual boot method, Ubuntu Linux will be made the default at start up. So if you walk away – it will automatically start-up Ubuntu. If you want it to default to Windows then Keep an eye on this site – will show you how a little later. In the meantime you will need to select windows at start-up if you want it.

OK that was it: Log in using the user-name and password you chose in the set up process and experience your new Desktop.
Next up….. Post install: Configuring updates, extras, passwords, settings and more.
