On a side-note:
I see you've got about 53 Gigs of free, unallocated space.
You should make that your extended partition and then reboot into the Install-CD of the distribution of your choice. If that means Ubuntu, make that the most-recent stable version (8.10) of the Live-DVD to ensure that you don't end up with (yet) unsupported (too fresh of the shelf) hardware. You can then start a setup-wizard from within the Live-system that also includes a partitioner (AFAIR). Early versions didn't really support partitioning from the graphical live-system's installer but I THINK the newer ones do. Since I have been directly upgrading my system for the last couple of releases I really didn't get to see for myself, so you might want to re-check that before. Might be that you still need the "alternate-install"-Disk for manual partitioning.
JUST MAKE SURE YOU DON'T RUSH ANYTHING. Clicking "O.K." without reading what a dialogue's information is saying isn't always the right choice when using a Linux.
Other than that: Have fun!
PS.: use a proper network-connection to install the system, something with an attached and functioning ethernet-cable, not any WIFI-stuff
I see you've got about 53 Gigs of free, unallocated space.
You should make that your extended partition and then reboot into the Install-CD of the distribution of your choice. If that means Ubuntu, make that the most-recent stable version (8.10) of the Live-DVD to ensure that you don't end up with (yet) unsupported (too fresh of the shelf) hardware. You can then start a setup-wizard from within the Live-system that also includes a partitioner (AFAIR). Early versions didn't really support partitioning from the graphical live-system's installer but I THINK the newer ones do. Since I have been directly upgrading my system for the last couple of releases I really didn't get to see for myself, so you might want to re-check that before. Might be that you still need the "alternate-install"-Disk for manual partitioning.
JUST MAKE SURE YOU DON'T RUSH ANYTHING. Clicking "O.K." without reading what a dialogue's information is saying isn't always the right choice when using a Linux.
Other than that: Have fun!
PS.: use a proper network-connection to install the system, something with an attached and functioning ethernet-cable, not any WIFI-stuff