![]() It will ask for your admin password though. If however you get an error, try sudo lsblk . Note : Under normal circumstances, you would not need to use “sudo”. So we will only use what is already available …įor additional information on other methods, please see the list of links below. I really wanted to fix this with the tools already on my computer. Installing additional tools wasn’t what I wanted either. I have seen many articles write about the use of extra tools, and frankly, I’m just too lazy to create a Windows Repair or Recovery disk, and I didn’t feel like creating an Ubuntu Live CD/Stick either. So the trick is to find which one is your Linux partition – to avoid that we damage vital partitions. This can lead to confusion and mistakes … However, if you’ve looked at the partitions on your computer (especially with Windows 8 and up), you’ll see a boat load of partitions. The partitions are probably obvious if you’re playing with your computer at this level. ![]() So we should probably first understand what we are looking at:Ī Windows partition (which we’d like to keep), a Linux partition (the one we’d like to remove), a bunch of other partitions of which we might have no clue why Microsoft even put them there (depends on your Windows version and hardware manufacturer), and GRUB. Sudo apt-get update sudo apt-get install -y os-uninstaller & os-uninstaller Sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yannubuntu /boot-repair
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