I currently have a Dell laptop that runs Windows for work. I use an external SSD via the Thunderbolt port to boot Linux allowing me to use the laptop as a personal device on a completely separate drive. All I have to do is F12 at boot, then select boot from USB drive.

However, this laptop is only using 1 of the 2 internal M.2 ports. Can I install Linux on a 2nd M.2 drive? I would want the laptop to normally boot Windows without a trace of the second option unless the drive is specified from the BIOS boot options.

Will this cause any issues with Windows? Will I be messing anything up? For the external drive setup, I installed Linux on a different computer, then transferred the SSD to the external drive. Can I do the same for the M.2 SSD – install Linux on my PC, then transfer that drive to the laptop?

Any thoughts or comments are welcome.

Edit: Thank you everyone! This was a great discussion with a lot of great and thoughtful responses. I really appreciate the replies and all the valuable information and opinions given here.

  • BaumGeist@lemmy.ml
    ·
    10 months ago

    The big takeaway is that you do not own this computer. It is not yours, it is being lent to them for a very specific purpose. And what you want to do, hell what you're already doing, is way outside of that purpose.

    How would you feel if you lent a friend your conputer to check their email and found out they had bypassed a lot of your security mechanisms (passwords) to set up their own admin account?

    What about when you begrudgingly get a MFA app on your personal phone because your employer's too cheap to shell out for a yubikey or hardware token? How would you feel if their app also rooted your phone just for shits and giggles?

    What you're proposing is not only dangerous to your career, it's also potentially illegal. And also just downright unethical.

  • acockworkorange@mander.xyz
    ·
    10 months ago

    You can buy a used ThinkPad T480 for like $75 on ebay. A lot cheaper than having to explain your shenanigans to Maude from HR.

  • Karna@lemmy.ml
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    edit-2
    10 months ago

    In most cases, work laptops have software(s) installed to automatically keep track of these activities, and flag it to security team of your organization. At that point, it will either lead to a formal warning to you, or termination/forced resignation.

    From organization point of view, this is to avoid any accidental (or intentional) leak of confidential data, and/or accidentally (or intentionally) infecting your (work) system with malware/ransomware.

    The latter had happened in one of my previous organizations, and the person responsible was terminated from job immediately.

  • LoveSausage@lemmy.ml
    ·
    10 months ago

    Damn my laptop has secure boot and extra on top , I believe the usb ports are physically disabled.

    I assume everything is watched on what I'm doing. Can't remember the wording but i can't do shit without getting in a heap of trouble.

    Browser add-ons are like a 2 week process to get approved