So you have it setup as a dual-boot system, where you choose which OS to boot when you boot up the laptop? There isn't an 'easy' way to do it, but you can try this-
First you need to remove GRUB: 1. Insert the Windows Setup CD into the CD or DVD tray on your computer. 2. Restart your computer. 3. Hit Enter to reboot from the Windows CD when prompted to do so. 4. Type “R” and hit Enter in Windows Setup to enter the Recovery Console. The Recovery Console will appear and list the Windows OSs on your machine. 5. Select the number corresponding to the Windows installation you wish to boot into. For most people this will be a “1”. 6. Windows will prompt you for an Administrator password. Try your Administrator password or, if your Administrator password does not work, hit Enter. 7. At the Windows prompt, type “fixmbr”. (If that doesn't work, try fixboot or fdisk /mbr) 8. Type “exit” to restart the computer. Your computer should restart using the Windows installation you selected. Then you will need to delete the Linux partitions. If you have a partition editor like gparted, use that, or you can use Control Panel>Administrative Tools>Computer Management>Disk management to delete the partition and recreate it using NTFS. This will make a new partition though, like drive E: or whatever, so if you want the whole thing on the default partition (C:), you need to use a partition editor. -- Ubuntu wont uninstall from my remove software. i want to reinstall it for some features werent loaded properly. how do i uninstall it? https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/283060 You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu. -- ubuntu-bugs mailing list ubuntu-bugs@lists.ubuntu.com https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs