We asked our readers what they think of Windows 11's forced Microsoft account requirement, and the answer is clear. Too bad it's not on the official list of improvements coming to the OS in 2026.
Since all of the “Linux is easy” folk are here I’ll ask a question even though I’m not near my PC:
I’m dual booting W11 and ZorinOS, I have 3 drives and only the OS drive mounts at boot. The other 2, games SSD and a storage HDD, have to mounted manually. An online search yielded that this was “expected behaviour” and “how it’s designed to work” but unfortunately it confuses Steam each time I boot because as far as Steam is concerned the drive ceases to exist.
Has anyone else had the same issue? I think I could use crontab to mount the drives at boot but it seems like something that shouldn’t be happening at all.
Not sure what you searched for to get those answers, all I had to search was “Linux mount at boot” to get this answer with directions for editing /etc/fstab or using the gnome disk utility gui based on your preference
It’s absolutely bananas that internal drives are not mounted automatically by standard. It’s even more bananas that it’s not easily customizable via GUI. Gnomes partitioning app can somewhat do it I believe, in KDE’s partitioning app, it was completely broken last time I tried. Either way I lost two people back to Windows because of this
this was the only confusing thing I found withWheb I started using Linux, but once I got my drive mounting at boot at startup.
I don’t have any problem with doing it anymore but why don’t beginner friendly distros have like a gui version or something easier to do that with for new users?
Since all of the “Linux is easy” folk are here I’ll ask a question even though I’m not near my PC:
I’m dual booting W11 and ZorinOS, I have 3 drives and only the OS drive mounts at boot. The other 2, games SSD and a storage HDD, have to mounted manually. An online search yielded that this was “expected behaviour” and “how it’s designed to work” but unfortunately it confuses Steam each time I boot because as far as Steam is concerned the drive ceases to exist.
Has anyone else had the same issue? I think I could use crontab to mount the drives at boot but it seems like something that shouldn’t be happening at all.
Not sure what you searched for to get those answers, all I had to search was “Linux mount at boot” to get this answer with directions for editing /etc/fstab or using the gnome disk utility gui based on your preference
It’s absolutely bananas that internal drives are not mounted automatically by standard. It’s even more bananas that it’s not easily customizable via GUI. Gnomes partitioning app can somewhat do it I believe, in KDE’s partitioning app, it was completely broken last time I tried. Either way I lost two people back to Windows because of this
Not sure, but I’ll give that a go this weekend when I have some time to play around with it. Many thanks!
The hard part is knowing exactly what language to search to get the result you want.
this was the only confusing thing I found withWheb I started using Linux, but once I got my drive mounting at boot at startup.
I don’t have any problem with doing it anymore but why don’t beginner friendly distros have like a gui version or something easier to do that with for new users?