When I want to see if a pc will boot Linux, I typically try a Puppy distro out of familiarity. Most machines can handle both, but on some I lose Windows.
Historically the most vulnerable are old 32-bit desktop devices, yet I recently acquired a hybrid (64-bit 'compatible' 32) laptop that lost Windows 7 booting Puppy. It boots a blank screen with a blinking cursor.
Puppy runs great but Windows is gone & I still need it. My intention actually was to use Puppy to repair Windows without a factory reset.
The ONLY changes I made besides booting both 32 & 64 distros is changing the BIOS boot order & accessing Windows system directories in a file manager without change, & otherwise copying/deleting files outside the system folders.
So I'm wondering, is the mere act of booting Puppy able to corrupt a Windows installation, or is it possible to do something very minor to thwart the default Windows boot?