from
The Free On-line Dictionary of Computing (8 July 2008)
dual boot
multiboot
multiple boot
<operating system> Any system offering the user the choice of
two {operation systems} (OSes) under which to start a
computer. A dual boot system allows the user to run programs
for both operating systems on a single computer (though not
simultaneously). The term "multiple boot" or "multiboot"
extends the idea to more than two OSes.
The OSes are generally unaware of each other's existence.
They are installed on separate {hard disk} {partitions} or on
separate disks. They may be able to access each other's
files, possibly via some extra {driver} software if they use
different {file systems}.
The OSes need not be completely different - they might be
different versions of {Microsoft Windows} (e.g. {Windows XP}
and {Windows NT}) or {Linux} (e.g. {Debian} and {Fedora}).
A dual boot system differs from an {emulator} such as
{vmware}, which runs one or more OSes "on top" of the primary
OS, using its resources.
(2005-02-01)