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Hi everyone,
I just got this working last night and I thought it was worth sharing with other forum users here. The interesting part was that the first time I tried to set this up, I downloaded the Ubuntu ISO file from Ubuntu.com official page. I created the USB bootable stick on a flash drive on my Dell desktop PC running W10 64bit. When I attempted to install using the bootable Ubuntu flas drive, it failed and I got an error message that said my Acer netbook was a 32bit OS and that the newest version of Ubuntu (v16.04LTS) was not compatible with my 32bit machine.
I had a thought that I recalled that the previous version of Ubuntu had both 32bit and 64bit ISO files via separate downloads. The first Ubuntu flash drive I tried was a Ubuntu 14.04LTS 64bit I made last year. This didn't work, so that's when I tried making the 16.04LTS bootable flash drive. The 16.04LTS apparently is supposed to contain both 32bit and 64bit capabilities, but when I created the flash drive using the 16.04LTS ISO file, it failed with the same non-compatible error message.
I wondered if it made a difference if I created the Ubuntu flash drive on a W10 machine or not, especially a W10 64bit OS machine. So, I thought if I tried this on a W7 32bit machine, it might work. I also tried downloading the Ubuntu 14.04LTS 32bit ISO file and burned the USB stick with Rufus 2.9. This worked perfectly, and allowed me to install 14.04LTS on my unallocated partition (50GB) on my 160GB drive in my Acer netbook. So, I now have it working with the Ubuntu boot manager that let's me select either Ubuntu 14.04LTS or my W10. In fact I'm connected via wifi to the Internet and am posting this from my Acer via the Ubuntu boot.
I'm wondering whether or not it would work the same if I had used the Ubuntu 16.04LTS ISO file and burned the USB stick on my W7 machine whether it would auto-install the 16.04 version on the Acer even though it's a W10-32bit system. I'll try that later and post back the result. I'm guessing the new 16.04 version should have the ability to auto-recognize whether the target machine has a 32bit CPU or 64bit chip and install the corresponding 32bit or 64bit version as required. In my case, I'm hoping it will install the 16.04 version on my Acer 32bit machine. As was done with the 14.04 version. I'm guessing I'll have to create the USB Ubuntu flash drive on the W7 computer.
Mostly, I'm just posting this if anyone else is trying to create a dual-boot W10-Ubuntu system and get's stuck trying to create the Ubuntu bootable flash drive on the W10 machine as I did.
Cheers!
<<<BIGBEARJEDI>>>