![]() ![]() ![]() Make sure you have an 8 GB or bigger USB flash drive, and leave the option “Copy the recovery partition from the PC to the recovery drive” selected. Here’s how: Use Start Search, look for recovery and choose “Create a recovery drive” from the results. ![]() If you own a Surface Pro 3, you should do this now and keep it in an easily accessible location. Here’s the 8 GB version ($5.50) and here is the 16 GB version ($7.50). ![]() I recently purchased a few Kingston Data Traveler 3.0 USB flash drives because you can write on them with a sharpie, and they’re not at all expensive. You will need at least one 8 GB flash drive (preferably two) and one 16 GB flash drive to create the recovery disks described below. So before getting to dual-booting, I wanted to quickly document the ways in which you can prepare to recover your Surface Pro 3 no matter what happens. But while investigating this topic I ran into a number of issues that are somewhat unique to Microsoft’s tablet. I’ll be publishing a guide to dual-booting Surface Pro 3 with Windows 10 soon. ![]()
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