How to create bootable USB flash drives for Linux Systems

How to create bootable USB flash drives for Linux Systems? It is quite possible that people would want to try out different distributions before they finalize what is right for their needs. But burning CDs to try them out is not at all feasible. Moreover, the latest netbooks come without a CD/DVD drive.So what is the way out? Create a Live bootable USB drive. This can be easily achieved using the software, Unetbootin.



I chose to use an already downloaded ISO image of the Ubuntu installation cd, and then chose my flash drive, and clicked the OK button. Yes, this step is as simple as that.







The process will extract the files from the ISO image (or download them), copy them to the flash drive and then install the bootloader. Depending on what you are installing, this really doesn’t take very long.







Once the process is completed, you’ll be prompted to reboot… which you don’t necessarily have to do unless you want to test booting the flash drive on the same machine you are using.







Otherwise you can hit the Exit button.



Make Sure the Partition is Active





If you get a boot device error when you try and boot from the flash device, it could be that your partition is not marked as active. What we’ll do is use the command line diskpart utility to fix this… if you are in Vista open an administrator mode command prompt by right-clicking and choosing Run as Administrator.



Now you’ll need to run this command to figure out the number of your flash drive:





list disk


This will show you the list of drives, and you will use the disk number in the “select disk” command:







select disk 1
select partition 1
active


The “active” command will actually mark the current partition as active, which is why you need to select the disk and then the partition. At this point you should be done.







Booting From the Flash Drive



Now that you are all finished, you can try and boot from the flash drive. Every BIOS is different, but most of them will have a message like “Press F12 for the Boot Menu”, which is highly suggested. The boot menu will allow you to select the USB drive as the boot device. (apologies for the simply horrible camera phone screenshots)







Instead of the regular Ubuntu boot menu that you might be used to seeing, you will see the UNetbootin menu, which has essentially the same options.







Useful Note



If you are having issues booting Ubuntu Hardy (8.04) on a Dell machine, you might want to switch back to using Ubuntu 7.10 instead.

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