Then the last step it said, was to take out the USB and put it in the computer i wish to boot it from. What it did, was it told me to insert my USB stick, and it downloaded all the files to the USB drive (i selected this option) so installed it on the USB. I installed it with the UNetbootin downloader from a link i got off this youtube video The reason I ask is that there may have been a problem with the way you installed in other words, was UNetbootin installed on the host machine or did you put the image on the USB by setting the executable bit for UNetbootin?
UNETBOOTIN WON T BOOT INSTALL
How did you install (I presume Ubuntu 10.04?) on the USB stick with UNetbootin from within Ubuntu or Windows and how did you install it? If you have more than one USB port, did you try switching to an alternative port? Use of livecd-iso-to-disk on any distribution other than Fedora is unsupported and not expected to work: please use an alternative method, such as Fedora Media Writer.Yep, it boots straight away because i changed the options in the BIOS Even if it happens to run and write a stick apparently successfully from some other distribution, the stick may well fail to boot. Livecd-iso-to-disk is not meant to be run from a non-Fedora system. livecd-iso-to-disk on other Linux distributions If your test boot reports a corrupted boot sector, or you get the message MBR appears to be blank., you need to install or reset the master boot record (MBR), by passing -reset-mbr when writing the stick. If you get this message from fdisk, you may need to reformat the flash drive when writing the image, by passing -format when writing the stick. Partition has different physical/logical endings If you get the message Need to have a filesystem label or UUID for your USB device, you need to label the partition: dosfslabel /dev/sdX LIVE. Information: Don't forget to update /etc/fstab, if necessary. Number Start End Size Type File system Flagsġ 32.3kB 1062MB 1062MB primary fat16 boot Sector size (logical/physical): 512B/512B Welcome to GNU Parted! Type 'help' to view a list of commands.
Difference between Fedora and Red Hat Enterprise Linux.
Installing, Configuring and Troubleshooting MySql/MariaDB.
UNETBOOTIN WON T BOOT DRIVERS
Getting started with virtualization (libvirt).Upgrading Fedora using the DNF system upgrade.
UNETBOOTIN WON T BOOT HOW TO