You can set a default OS and a specified length of time to wait for a selection. It would detect all the OS you have in the different partitions and give you a selection menu every time you turn the Pi on for which OS to boot. install and use a boot manager: For the Raspberry Pi, your best bet for a boot manager is probably BerryBoot.To do this, only the word jessie has to be replaced by stretch. install each OS in a different partition: I don't think NOOBS has that option, this would have to be done as an "advanced user." For upgrading to the new Raspbian version, the package lists must be adapted to the Stretch release.Your SD card currently only has 1 partition (because you are using the entire thing), but you could use a partition utility (on your PC or Mac) like fdisk to create more than one. create separate partitions on the SD card: Think of a partition as a "drive".Multiple OS's on the same SD card: my least favoured option. Having everything on the one SD card makes it likely that when the card goes bust, you just may lose everything from both OS's. So I wanted to have both Raspbian Jessie NOOBS and Retropie both istalled at the same time selectable in the NOOBS box. SD cards are both inexpensive and prone to failure. Instructions used from Retropie site for new install. Repeat the process you went through to install RetroPi, instead install Raspbian on a new SD card. Separate SD cards: this is always my recommendation.
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