Hey Newbie Here
Have A Acer C720 Chomebook With An Upgraded SSD 128GB, Run Ubuntu Threw Cruton But Dont Know To Much
Have Legacy Boot And Really Into Messing Around
Looking For A Bootable Virtual Machine OS, What I Mean Is A Small Operating System With Enough To Support Hardware And Qemu Or Better Installation, Size Dose'nt Matter And Hopefully Something Already Put Together But I Can Understand Instructons
I Once Found A Tinycore Iso That Was Bootable And Booted Straight Into A Partition-er - A Bootable Partition-er And All Around Bootable Disk Management Os..... I Love The Idea Of Bootable Software, It Was Only Like 40+ Megs
Ive Looked All Around Google And Couldent Find Anything
Tried To Make one Myself And Cant Understand How To Put Together Something Like That
Even Just A Terminal That Boots Qemu With The Right Command Or Something That Compares To A Bootable Tinycore Program
Thanks, Open To Better Newer Ideas , And Anything Helps
I want to install ArchLinux, but i have a problem. When i open cfdisk(gpt), there is no bootable option. I pressed b, but it doesn't work. How can i make my disk part bootable? (sory for my bad english)
Hi All,
I recently decided to tryout Linux and dual booted my laptop (originally just had windows 8) with Xubuntu. Now I want to try out Kali Linux. So I downloaded Kali and made a bootable USB, the problem is that when I try to boot from the USB it just brings up the grub menu asking me to select Xubuntu, Windows etc. I've changed the boot menu in the BIOS but that has no effect.
I've tried booting into windows and the restarting by holding shift but when I select the usb option it just says:
"system doesn't have any USB boot option. Please select other boot option in Boot Manager Menu"
and then returns to the grub menu. I don't understand because I used a bootable usb to install xubunto?
I'd be really grateful if anyone can help me out with this!
Thanks
Good evening;
Following instructions on-line I attempted to create a bootable USB drive (32GB Sandsik extreme) with Linux 17.1 installed to enable a trial before attempting a permanent install beside windows 7 on a new computer with Win7 prof. installed.
On the usb I see a 4.0 GB area highlighted in G Parted but not accessible from the Linux file manager. This shows up as a ~1.4 GB sub-directory titled casper. and also as 4.0 GB 'file' named casper-rw. Can anyone explain what is the purpose of this sub-directory? The software I used to create the usb bootable drive and install Linux to is 'Universal-USB-Installer-1.9.5.9'. This is a windows executable. My intent was to create a bootable usb drive for Linux that also contained my required hardware drivers, etc. This doesn't appear to be working 100%; although Linux 17.1 boots the nvidia hardware drivers do not appear to be available even though I downloaded these and they are on the same usb. On boot-up a message box indicates that hardware acceleration is not enabled and higher than normal processor usage may occur.
Any assistance / direction, etc. would be greatly appreciated.
Regards;
Mike
Hi all,
As you can probably tell I am new to Linux and new to the forum, I am using Kali and Mint both as live Linux environments on USB drives, all is good and I am finding my way around, the reason for the post is that I need to copy 15 CF cards that have multiple partitions, Windows isn't really an option as it can only see one partition on a removable drive, so here goes with Linux.
The CF cards contain Windows Embedded XP in one partition and a separate partition for user data which isn't protected, not that the contents matter, only the fact that it is bootable with multiple partitions, the object is to upgrade the old 2gb cards to 4gb cards to add an additional program on the embedded drive, but they are both full.
as long as I can copy both partitions over the partition size doesn't matter as I can resize that if necessary, but I need both partitions to copy over to the new drive.
I have read that dd command is the way to go but cant find much on multiple partitions which display in Linux as two drives, so how do I go about this, any pointers
Ideally I would like to automate the process as this is something that we could end up doing on a regular basis, I have seen a USB drive that was plugged into a PC and through a basic GUI allowed you to copy a HDD but I don't know If that would do both partitions, something for the future?
Here's a quick video of what's going on so I don't have to try to explain.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4Zj...ature=youtu.be
Just saw how laggy the video was, I say "Why won't the ISO pop up and then let me create the bootable USB?
Also when it tries to format my USB, this comes up.
http://imgur.com/uZUGPuk
I downloaded Linux Mint "Rebecca". When I open the ISO it gave me a window to burn the ISO to disc. After I burned to disc the disc is not bootable.
Does windows have a tool to make bootable usb from iso?
hi All,
i tried to make a bootable linux mint usb. i thought i succeeded but when i pull out the usb and try to boot back into windows i still boot into linux mint. this is probably a stupid question but have installed linux mint over my windows mistakenly.
help....please
hi guys,
i want to back up my centos server that has a few virtual machines on it...i read that some people were saying dd is a very good way to do this. but a lot of people dont cause of fear of the command line.
i would like to write a script that backus up the entire hard drive to a ext usb hard drive.
i have a couple of questions though.
1) am i better off using a cloning software like acronis or storage craft.
2) can dd also restore a system to a bootable state or is it really just a backup.
3) can you still use the system while it is backing up?
thanks...
hello guys .... 1st iam 0 linux user but have some problems on one of our machine and i want to make a backup for my cf .... i have knoppix on my flash to boot from it and want step by step please what exact to do to copy this cf to another one .... i have 2 readers if its easier please looking for answer really fast , thx