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Non tech here, was trying to install ubuntu to flash drive and boot without installing like I've done before... Downloaded ubuntu onto new flash, loaded it and there was no option to run without installing so I clicked install.

Desktop GUI wasn't included, wifi not connected and looks like I installed THE SERVER.

Is Windows 10 gone, did I uninstall it? How can I switch back to it if not?

Edit: Not duplicate of the below question because I didn't click "replace windows with ubuntu". Nor did I attempt to keep one drive while removing the other. I thought I was uploading desktop ubuntu, was still asleep and clicked through, it's ubuntu server. I clicked under partition to use the space available, rather than reorganizing fragmented spaces into one space. Didn't think it would erase the rest of windows.

user803674
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    Hmm, best thing to do would probably be boot a normal live image and examine the partitioning state with the included `gparted` program. – You'reAGitForNotUsingGit Mar 08 '18 at 18:18
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    Possible duplicate of [How do I recover my accidentally lost Windows partitions after installing Ubuntu?](https://askubuntu.com/questions/286181/how-do-i-recover-my-accidentally-lost-windows-partitions-after-installing-ubuntu) and [How can I list the hard drive and all its partitions including size from terminal?](https://askubuntu.com/questions/431505/how-can-i-list-the-hard-drive-and-all-its-partitions-including-size-from-termina) – karel Mar 08 '18 at 18:27
  • Thanks for the suggestion but being a non-tech I don't know what that means. – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 18:53
  • I didn't select any option to replace windows during setup but under partition I didn't reorganize the available space to put Linux all together. – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 18:54
  • Instead I clicked "use all space available " or something like that – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 18:55
  • Can you boot Windows? – wjandrea Mar 08 '18 at 19:06
  • No there are only ubuntu, advanced options for ubuntu and system setup – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 19:16
  • That is, those are the potions at startup. Sorry for posting all these one line posts. – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 19:17
  • Booting into boot manager with f12 gives me one option for "ubuntu(ST1000LM024 HN-M101MBB)" and a second option which fails to boot for "EFI PXE Network". – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 19:23
  • Regarding my suggestion of `gparted`, just boot a normal (non-server) live image, and in the dock search for "Gparted". Open the program, and please post a screenshot of what it displays. – You'reAGitForNotUsingGit Mar 08 '18 at 21:21
  • Appreciate the advice, I would try to do that, but my wireless and Ethernet drivers are disabled, don't seem to have the packages to do anything, can't get them through windows since I don't have it anymore, can't get them in the terminal since I don't have internet. – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 22:36
  • Trying to figure out what I can do, didn't even want unintuitive server in the first place, thought I was installing ubuntu desktop like I used from the flash drive before. Is it possible to get a 'live image' under the above circumstances? Totally out of my depth. – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 22:38
  • For example "the program 'gparted ' is not installed. You can install it by typing ..." [i do it] ... "unable to locate package gparted" – user803674 Mar 08 '18 at 22:44
  • @user803674 A live image is what you put on a USB drive to "Try without installing", like you were trying to do in the first place. – wjandrea Mar 09 '18 at 01:01
  • @user803674 But honestly, I think you're in over your head. As far as I'm aware, the Ubuntu Server installer is CLI-based and not intuitive for a novice, and there is no "use available space" option during installation. So where you may have overwritten Windows and any data you had stored on Windows partitions, you may want to seek more in-depth support. – wjandrea Mar 09 '18 at 01:02
  • Ok I will have to find a secure computer to do that from now that windows is unaccessible – user803674 Mar 09 '18 at 01:03
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    The question in the duplicate might not be the path you took, but the result is the same: your Windows is gone and the more you try booting / creating files in Ubuntu, the less likelyhood you have of recovering any data... – Fabby Mar 18 '18 at 12:03

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