The installer will prompt you to confirm:Īfter you select 'Yes', the installer will erase the whole content of the hard disk, partition and install Android-x86 to it. If you want to use Android-x86 as the only OS in your device, you may choose "Auto Installation" under the "Advanced options". Select the one you want to upgrade, or choose to install to a new folder. If there are multiple older versions in the same partition, the installer will ask which version to upgrade: Select 'No' to install the new version to a new directory and keep the older installation untouched. The installer will prompt if you'd like to upgrade it: Just select the partition containing the older installation. You may upgrade an older Android-x86 installation by the installer.
Congratulations! Now you can run Andrond-x86 directly, or you can reboot and run it:
Select 'Yes' to confirm, or select 'No' to keep the original filesystem. If you choose to format the partition, you will see a warning like below.Note the type you chose must match the partition id, or the boot loader will fail to boot. Otherwise, choose a filesystem type to format. If the partition is formatted, you may choose 'Do not re-format' to keep existing data. Android-x86 can co-exist with other operating system or data in the chosen partition.If the target drive is not shown, try 'Detect devices'. Note you can install Android-x86 to an external disk like USB drive. You can choose an existing partition to install Android-x86, or you can create or modify partitions by choosing 'Create/Modify partitions'. After seconds of booting, you will see a partition selection dialog.Boot from the Android-x86 installation CD/USB, choose the 'Install Android-x86 to harddisk' item, as shown below:.Burn the iso image to cdrom, or create a bootable USB disk (recommended).
Usually you should just use the latest image.