How can I create a bootable Ubuntu LiveUSB using Windows 7?












4















I want to create a boot USB stick to test Ubuntu to make sure it will run on an old laptop (IBM ThinkPad with no operating system and no CD capability) I was given.



How can I download direct to a USB stick via a Windows 7 PC? It's a friend's PC so I don't want to do anything on that machine, just use it to download the ISO and prepare the LiveUSB.










share|improve this question

























  • ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows

    – Rinzwind
    Nov 9 '14 at 21:35
















4















I want to create a boot USB stick to test Ubuntu to make sure it will run on an old laptop (IBM ThinkPad with no operating system and no CD capability) I was given.



How can I download direct to a USB stick via a Windows 7 PC? It's a friend's PC so I don't want to do anything on that machine, just use it to download the ISO and prepare the LiveUSB.










share|improve this question

























  • ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows

    – Rinzwind
    Nov 9 '14 at 21:35














4












4








4


1






I want to create a boot USB stick to test Ubuntu to make sure it will run on an old laptop (IBM ThinkPad with no operating system and no CD capability) I was given.



How can I download direct to a USB stick via a Windows 7 PC? It's a friend's PC so I don't want to do anything on that machine, just use it to download the ISO and prepare the LiveUSB.










share|improve this question
















I want to create a boot USB stick to test Ubuntu to make sure it will run on an old laptop (IBM ThinkPad with no operating system and no CD capability) I was given.



How can I download direct to a USB stick via a Windows 7 PC? It's a friend's PC so I don't want to do anything on that machine, just use it to download the ISO and prepare the LiveUSB.







live-usb






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 9 '14 at 21:54









Dennis

1,43921834




1,43921834










asked Nov 8 '14 at 19:26









Zephyr99Zephyr99

211




211













  • ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows

    – Rinzwind
    Nov 9 '14 at 21:35



















  • ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows

    – Rinzwind
    Nov 9 '14 at 21:35

















ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows

– Rinzwind
Nov 9 '14 at 21:35





ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows

– Rinzwind
Nov 9 '14 at 21:35










4 Answers
4






active

oldest

votes


















1














I don't think you can download "direct to USB" but you can download the ISO then download a simple exe which will create the bootable USB using the ISO. I always use the tools found at http://www.pendrivelinux.com/

Specifically if you just want to put one ISO one a USB you will want "Universal USB Installer". Very fast, very easy, no need to install anything.






share|improve this answer



















  • 1





    I just want to add, that in addition to the Universal USB Installer, you need to actually download the ISO as well.

    – Cammy_the_block
    Nov 9 '14 at 21:50





















1














To create a LiveUSB drive, from an ISO source image, you normally use a specialized application. This is because USB boot drives use the hard disk boot standard, and ISO's are prepared to use the CD boot standard. Ubuntu ISO's are actually hybrid images, so they can boot once written by either standard.



So if you wanted to do this from Windows, without installing something, you could run something as a portable app.



Check out http://rufus.akeo.ie/, it's a portable app called Rufus. It's often used for this type of situation. I also found a blog entry about your use case, http://bootableusb.net/install-windows-ubuntu-usb-drive-using-rufus/






share|improve this answer
























  • Interesting! Shorter than the official install process, although it assumes you know which version to get, and what to do once you have the flashdrive prepared. Nevertheless, thumbs up!

    – K7AAY
    Nov 9 '14 at 22:20



















0














Well, which Ubuntu do you want?



The Ubuntu desktop installer with the Unity desktop environment is freely downloadable as an ISO file, but you may wish to look at other versions of *buntu, especially since your destination machine, that old IBM-vintage ThinkPad, may be a little slow with Unity. Other official distributions you may consider are listed at Wikipedia, and include:




  • Kubuntu


  • Lubuntu <--- what I use on my Lenovo Thinkpad R60


  • Ubuntu GNOME (click the Download link on the menu bar)

  • Xubuntu


All of those use less memory and respond faster than the Unity desktop environment in the official Ubuntu distribution. This is especially useful if your old Thinkpad's RAM is less than 2GB.





Once you have decided which you want to use, download its ISO file. Download the 32-bit version, since your IBM ThinkPad is old and may not have the RAM recommended for 64-bit versions of *buntu. (We can talk about changing to 64-bit later, once we have it up and running in 32-bit).



When you have its 32-bit ISO file completely downloaded, then we follow the official Ubuntu instructions at http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows





Step Zero is to download and install a small, and harmless, app on the Windows PC. The app, the Universal USB Installer, allows you to turn a USB flashdrive into a LiveUSB. (I recommend using at least a 2GB flashdrive, although some of the versions above will let you use a smaller flashdrive. A larger flashdrive is AOK.)



Once the Universal USB Installer is downloaded and installed in Windows, Step One is to launch that app, and choose the version of *buntu you downloaded.



Step Two: Click on Browse to find the ISO file you downloaded for it, and Open it.



Step Three: Choose the drive letter for your USB Flashdrive, and click on Create.



Step Four: Once created, close this app, and then in the Windows Desktop, in the Tray at lower right down by the clock, click on the USB icon and safely remove the flashdrive.



Step Five: Plug the Flashdrive into the IBM, and power up. Press {F12} to call up the list of bootable devices, and choose the USB Flashdrive.



If the Flashdrive does not appear, then power off, power back up, and press {F1} to go into the ThinkPad BIOS, and there configure the ThinkPad so the USB FlashDrive is a bootable device, then save the change, reboot, and press {F12} to pick the flashdrive for booting. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStickQuick#Start_the_Ubuntu_installer provides extra detail on this.





Step Six: You now have booted from the LiveUSB, which will give you the choice of running *buntu from that Live USB drive, or installing *buntu on your hard drive. Running from the LiveUSB is AOK; it lets you 'try before you buy', and experiment to see which version of *buntu you like the best.



Step Seven: Once you know which you like, then click on the installer, which will ask you several commonsense questions, and then reboot the PC. When the screen goes blank in the reboot process, remove the USB Flashdrive, and your ThinkPad will boot into your brand new *buntu from your hard drive.






share|improve this answer

































    0














    Well, basically you can't download the software directly to a USB stick. Therefor you must download it to another PC and transfer the files to your USB device. Even though your USB device must be a bootable USB drive.





    So, to convert a normal USB device into a bootable USB stick, you need a bootable software. The Rufus is the best software to create bootable USB without any frustration.
    Transferring the OS file is also include in the booting process.





    Resource: - https://www.rufusdownloads.com/rufus-download-for-linux.html





    share








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      4 Answers
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      active

      oldest

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      4 Answers
      4






      active

      oldest

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      1














      I don't think you can download "direct to USB" but you can download the ISO then download a simple exe which will create the bootable USB using the ISO. I always use the tools found at http://www.pendrivelinux.com/

      Specifically if you just want to put one ISO one a USB you will want "Universal USB Installer". Very fast, very easy, no need to install anything.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        I just want to add, that in addition to the Universal USB Installer, you need to actually download the ISO as well.

        – Cammy_the_block
        Nov 9 '14 at 21:50


















      1














      I don't think you can download "direct to USB" but you can download the ISO then download a simple exe which will create the bootable USB using the ISO. I always use the tools found at http://www.pendrivelinux.com/

      Specifically if you just want to put one ISO one a USB you will want "Universal USB Installer". Very fast, very easy, no need to install anything.






      share|improve this answer



















      • 1





        I just want to add, that in addition to the Universal USB Installer, you need to actually download the ISO as well.

        – Cammy_the_block
        Nov 9 '14 at 21:50
















      1












      1








      1







      I don't think you can download "direct to USB" but you can download the ISO then download a simple exe which will create the bootable USB using the ISO. I always use the tools found at http://www.pendrivelinux.com/

      Specifically if you just want to put one ISO one a USB you will want "Universal USB Installer". Very fast, very easy, no need to install anything.






      share|improve this answer













      I don't think you can download "direct to USB" but you can download the ISO then download a simple exe which will create the bootable USB using the ISO. I always use the tools found at http://www.pendrivelinux.com/

      Specifically if you just want to put one ISO one a USB you will want "Universal USB Installer". Very fast, very easy, no need to install anything.







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Nov 9 '14 at 21:40









      DennisDennis

      1,43921834




      1,43921834








      • 1





        I just want to add, that in addition to the Universal USB Installer, you need to actually download the ISO as well.

        – Cammy_the_block
        Nov 9 '14 at 21:50
















      • 1





        I just want to add, that in addition to the Universal USB Installer, you need to actually download the ISO as well.

        – Cammy_the_block
        Nov 9 '14 at 21:50










      1




      1





      I just want to add, that in addition to the Universal USB Installer, you need to actually download the ISO as well.

      – Cammy_the_block
      Nov 9 '14 at 21:50







      I just want to add, that in addition to the Universal USB Installer, you need to actually download the ISO as well.

      – Cammy_the_block
      Nov 9 '14 at 21:50















      1














      To create a LiveUSB drive, from an ISO source image, you normally use a specialized application. This is because USB boot drives use the hard disk boot standard, and ISO's are prepared to use the CD boot standard. Ubuntu ISO's are actually hybrid images, so they can boot once written by either standard.



      So if you wanted to do this from Windows, without installing something, you could run something as a portable app.



      Check out http://rufus.akeo.ie/, it's a portable app called Rufus. It's often used for this type of situation. I also found a blog entry about your use case, http://bootableusb.net/install-windows-ubuntu-usb-drive-using-rufus/






      share|improve this answer
























      • Interesting! Shorter than the official install process, although it assumes you know which version to get, and what to do once you have the flashdrive prepared. Nevertheless, thumbs up!

        – K7AAY
        Nov 9 '14 at 22:20
















      1














      To create a LiveUSB drive, from an ISO source image, you normally use a specialized application. This is because USB boot drives use the hard disk boot standard, and ISO's are prepared to use the CD boot standard. Ubuntu ISO's are actually hybrid images, so they can boot once written by either standard.



      So if you wanted to do this from Windows, without installing something, you could run something as a portable app.



      Check out http://rufus.akeo.ie/, it's a portable app called Rufus. It's often used for this type of situation. I also found a blog entry about your use case, http://bootableusb.net/install-windows-ubuntu-usb-drive-using-rufus/






      share|improve this answer
























      • Interesting! Shorter than the official install process, although it assumes you know which version to get, and what to do once you have the flashdrive prepared. Nevertheless, thumbs up!

        – K7AAY
        Nov 9 '14 at 22:20














      1












      1








      1







      To create a LiveUSB drive, from an ISO source image, you normally use a specialized application. This is because USB boot drives use the hard disk boot standard, and ISO's are prepared to use the CD boot standard. Ubuntu ISO's are actually hybrid images, so they can boot once written by either standard.



      So if you wanted to do this from Windows, without installing something, you could run something as a portable app.



      Check out http://rufus.akeo.ie/, it's a portable app called Rufus. It's often used for this type of situation. I also found a blog entry about your use case, http://bootableusb.net/install-windows-ubuntu-usb-drive-using-rufus/






      share|improve this answer













      To create a LiveUSB drive, from an ISO source image, you normally use a specialized application. This is because USB boot drives use the hard disk boot standard, and ISO's are prepared to use the CD boot standard. Ubuntu ISO's are actually hybrid images, so they can boot once written by either standard.



      So if you wanted to do this from Windows, without installing something, you could run something as a portable app.



      Check out http://rufus.akeo.ie/, it's a portable app called Rufus. It's often used for this type of situation. I also found a blog entry about your use case, http://bootableusb.net/install-windows-ubuntu-usb-drive-using-rufus/







      share|improve this answer












      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer










      answered Nov 9 '14 at 21:58









      J. M. BeckerJ. M. Becker

      1,31221120




      1,31221120













      • Interesting! Shorter than the official install process, although it assumes you know which version to get, and what to do once you have the flashdrive prepared. Nevertheless, thumbs up!

        – K7AAY
        Nov 9 '14 at 22:20



















      • Interesting! Shorter than the official install process, although it assumes you know which version to get, and what to do once you have the flashdrive prepared. Nevertheless, thumbs up!

        – K7AAY
        Nov 9 '14 at 22:20

















      Interesting! Shorter than the official install process, although it assumes you know which version to get, and what to do once you have the flashdrive prepared. Nevertheless, thumbs up!

      – K7AAY
      Nov 9 '14 at 22:20





      Interesting! Shorter than the official install process, although it assumes you know which version to get, and what to do once you have the flashdrive prepared. Nevertheless, thumbs up!

      – K7AAY
      Nov 9 '14 at 22:20











      0














      Well, which Ubuntu do you want?



      The Ubuntu desktop installer with the Unity desktop environment is freely downloadable as an ISO file, but you may wish to look at other versions of *buntu, especially since your destination machine, that old IBM-vintage ThinkPad, may be a little slow with Unity. Other official distributions you may consider are listed at Wikipedia, and include:




      • Kubuntu


      • Lubuntu <--- what I use on my Lenovo Thinkpad R60


      • Ubuntu GNOME (click the Download link on the menu bar)

      • Xubuntu


      All of those use less memory and respond faster than the Unity desktop environment in the official Ubuntu distribution. This is especially useful if your old Thinkpad's RAM is less than 2GB.





      Once you have decided which you want to use, download its ISO file. Download the 32-bit version, since your IBM ThinkPad is old and may not have the RAM recommended for 64-bit versions of *buntu. (We can talk about changing to 64-bit later, once we have it up and running in 32-bit).



      When you have its 32-bit ISO file completely downloaded, then we follow the official Ubuntu instructions at http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows





      Step Zero is to download and install a small, and harmless, app on the Windows PC. The app, the Universal USB Installer, allows you to turn a USB flashdrive into a LiveUSB. (I recommend using at least a 2GB flashdrive, although some of the versions above will let you use a smaller flashdrive. A larger flashdrive is AOK.)



      Once the Universal USB Installer is downloaded and installed in Windows, Step One is to launch that app, and choose the version of *buntu you downloaded.



      Step Two: Click on Browse to find the ISO file you downloaded for it, and Open it.



      Step Three: Choose the drive letter for your USB Flashdrive, and click on Create.



      Step Four: Once created, close this app, and then in the Windows Desktop, in the Tray at lower right down by the clock, click on the USB icon and safely remove the flashdrive.



      Step Five: Plug the Flashdrive into the IBM, and power up. Press {F12} to call up the list of bootable devices, and choose the USB Flashdrive.



      If the Flashdrive does not appear, then power off, power back up, and press {F1} to go into the ThinkPad BIOS, and there configure the ThinkPad so the USB FlashDrive is a bootable device, then save the change, reboot, and press {F12} to pick the flashdrive for booting. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStickQuick#Start_the_Ubuntu_installer provides extra detail on this.





      Step Six: You now have booted from the LiveUSB, which will give you the choice of running *buntu from that Live USB drive, or installing *buntu on your hard drive. Running from the LiveUSB is AOK; it lets you 'try before you buy', and experiment to see which version of *buntu you like the best.



      Step Seven: Once you know which you like, then click on the installer, which will ask you several commonsense questions, and then reboot the PC. When the screen goes blank in the reboot process, remove the USB Flashdrive, and your ThinkPad will boot into your brand new *buntu from your hard drive.






      share|improve this answer






























        0














        Well, which Ubuntu do you want?



        The Ubuntu desktop installer with the Unity desktop environment is freely downloadable as an ISO file, but you may wish to look at other versions of *buntu, especially since your destination machine, that old IBM-vintage ThinkPad, may be a little slow with Unity. Other official distributions you may consider are listed at Wikipedia, and include:




        • Kubuntu


        • Lubuntu <--- what I use on my Lenovo Thinkpad R60


        • Ubuntu GNOME (click the Download link on the menu bar)

        • Xubuntu


        All of those use less memory and respond faster than the Unity desktop environment in the official Ubuntu distribution. This is especially useful if your old Thinkpad's RAM is less than 2GB.





        Once you have decided which you want to use, download its ISO file. Download the 32-bit version, since your IBM ThinkPad is old and may not have the RAM recommended for 64-bit versions of *buntu. (We can talk about changing to 64-bit later, once we have it up and running in 32-bit).



        When you have its 32-bit ISO file completely downloaded, then we follow the official Ubuntu instructions at http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows





        Step Zero is to download and install a small, and harmless, app on the Windows PC. The app, the Universal USB Installer, allows you to turn a USB flashdrive into a LiveUSB. (I recommend using at least a 2GB flashdrive, although some of the versions above will let you use a smaller flashdrive. A larger flashdrive is AOK.)



        Once the Universal USB Installer is downloaded and installed in Windows, Step One is to launch that app, and choose the version of *buntu you downloaded.



        Step Two: Click on Browse to find the ISO file you downloaded for it, and Open it.



        Step Three: Choose the drive letter for your USB Flashdrive, and click on Create.



        Step Four: Once created, close this app, and then in the Windows Desktop, in the Tray at lower right down by the clock, click on the USB icon and safely remove the flashdrive.



        Step Five: Plug the Flashdrive into the IBM, and power up. Press {F12} to call up the list of bootable devices, and choose the USB Flashdrive.



        If the Flashdrive does not appear, then power off, power back up, and press {F1} to go into the ThinkPad BIOS, and there configure the ThinkPad so the USB FlashDrive is a bootable device, then save the change, reboot, and press {F12} to pick the flashdrive for booting. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStickQuick#Start_the_Ubuntu_installer provides extra detail on this.





        Step Six: You now have booted from the LiveUSB, which will give you the choice of running *buntu from that Live USB drive, or installing *buntu on your hard drive. Running from the LiveUSB is AOK; it lets you 'try before you buy', and experiment to see which version of *buntu you like the best.



        Step Seven: Once you know which you like, then click on the installer, which will ask you several commonsense questions, and then reboot the PC. When the screen goes blank in the reboot process, remove the USB Flashdrive, and your ThinkPad will boot into your brand new *buntu from your hard drive.






        share|improve this answer




























          0












          0








          0







          Well, which Ubuntu do you want?



          The Ubuntu desktop installer with the Unity desktop environment is freely downloadable as an ISO file, but you may wish to look at other versions of *buntu, especially since your destination machine, that old IBM-vintage ThinkPad, may be a little slow with Unity. Other official distributions you may consider are listed at Wikipedia, and include:




          • Kubuntu


          • Lubuntu <--- what I use on my Lenovo Thinkpad R60


          • Ubuntu GNOME (click the Download link on the menu bar)

          • Xubuntu


          All of those use less memory and respond faster than the Unity desktop environment in the official Ubuntu distribution. This is especially useful if your old Thinkpad's RAM is less than 2GB.





          Once you have decided which you want to use, download its ISO file. Download the 32-bit version, since your IBM ThinkPad is old and may not have the RAM recommended for 64-bit versions of *buntu. (We can talk about changing to 64-bit later, once we have it up and running in 32-bit).



          When you have its 32-bit ISO file completely downloaded, then we follow the official Ubuntu instructions at http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows





          Step Zero is to download and install a small, and harmless, app on the Windows PC. The app, the Universal USB Installer, allows you to turn a USB flashdrive into a LiveUSB. (I recommend using at least a 2GB flashdrive, although some of the versions above will let you use a smaller flashdrive. A larger flashdrive is AOK.)



          Once the Universal USB Installer is downloaded and installed in Windows, Step One is to launch that app, and choose the version of *buntu you downloaded.



          Step Two: Click on Browse to find the ISO file you downloaded for it, and Open it.



          Step Three: Choose the drive letter for your USB Flashdrive, and click on Create.



          Step Four: Once created, close this app, and then in the Windows Desktop, in the Tray at lower right down by the clock, click on the USB icon and safely remove the flashdrive.



          Step Five: Plug the Flashdrive into the IBM, and power up. Press {F12} to call up the list of bootable devices, and choose the USB Flashdrive.



          If the Flashdrive does not appear, then power off, power back up, and press {F1} to go into the ThinkPad BIOS, and there configure the ThinkPad so the USB FlashDrive is a bootable device, then save the change, reboot, and press {F12} to pick the flashdrive for booting. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStickQuick#Start_the_Ubuntu_installer provides extra detail on this.





          Step Six: You now have booted from the LiveUSB, which will give you the choice of running *buntu from that Live USB drive, or installing *buntu on your hard drive. Running from the LiveUSB is AOK; it lets you 'try before you buy', and experiment to see which version of *buntu you like the best.



          Step Seven: Once you know which you like, then click on the installer, which will ask you several commonsense questions, and then reboot the PC. When the screen goes blank in the reboot process, remove the USB Flashdrive, and your ThinkPad will boot into your brand new *buntu from your hard drive.






          share|improve this answer















          Well, which Ubuntu do you want?



          The Ubuntu desktop installer with the Unity desktop environment is freely downloadable as an ISO file, but you may wish to look at other versions of *buntu, especially since your destination machine, that old IBM-vintage ThinkPad, may be a little slow with Unity. Other official distributions you may consider are listed at Wikipedia, and include:




          • Kubuntu


          • Lubuntu <--- what I use on my Lenovo Thinkpad R60


          • Ubuntu GNOME (click the Download link on the menu bar)

          • Xubuntu


          All of those use less memory and respond faster than the Unity desktop environment in the official Ubuntu distribution. This is especially useful if your old Thinkpad's RAM is less than 2GB.





          Once you have decided which you want to use, download its ISO file. Download the 32-bit version, since your IBM ThinkPad is old and may not have the RAM recommended for 64-bit versions of *buntu. (We can talk about changing to 64-bit later, once we have it up and running in 32-bit).



          When you have its 32-bit ISO file completely downloaded, then we follow the official Ubuntu instructions at http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop/create-a-usb-stick-on-windows





          Step Zero is to download and install a small, and harmless, app on the Windows PC. The app, the Universal USB Installer, allows you to turn a USB flashdrive into a LiveUSB. (I recommend using at least a 2GB flashdrive, although some of the versions above will let you use a smaller flashdrive. A larger flashdrive is AOK.)



          Once the Universal USB Installer is downloaded and installed in Windows, Step One is to launch that app, and choose the version of *buntu you downloaded.



          Step Two: Click on Browse to find the ISO file you downloaded for it, and Open it.



          Step Three: Choose the drive letter for your USB Flashdrive, and click on Create.



          Step Four: Once created, close this app, and then in the Windows Desktop, in the Tray at lower right down by the clock, click on the USB icon and safely remove the flashdrive.



          Step Five: Plug the Flashdrive into the IBM, and power up. Press {F12} to call up the list of bootable devices, and choose the USB Flashdrive.



          If the Flashdrive does not appear, then power off, power back up, and press {F1} to go into the ThinkPad BIOS, and there configure the ThinkPad so the USB FlashDrive is a bootable device, then save the change, reboot, and press {F12} to pick the flashdrive for booting. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/FromUSBStickQuick#Start_the_Ubuntu_installer provides extra detail on this.





          Step Six: You now have booted from the LiveUSB, which will give you the choice of running *buntu from that Live USB drive, or installing *buntu on your hard drive. Running from the LiveUSB is AOK; it lets you 'try before you buy', and experiment to see which version of *buntu you like the best.



          Step Seven: Once you know which you like, then click on the installer, which will ask you several commonsense questions, and then reboot the PC. When the screen goes blank in the reboot process, remove the USB Flashdrive, and your ThinkPad will boot into your brand new *buntu from your hard drive.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:23









          Community

          1




          1










          answered Nov 9 '14 at 22:15









          K7AAYK7AAY

          3,93721644




          3,93721644























              0














              Well, basically you can't download the software directly to a USB stick. Therefor you must download it to another PC and transfer the files to your USB device. Even though your USB device must be a bootable USB drive.





              So, to convert a normal USB device into a bootable USB stick, you need a bootable software. The Rufus is the best software to create bootable USB without any frustration.
              Transferring the OS file is also include in the booting process.





              Resource: - https://www.rufusdownloads.com/rufus-download-for-linux.html





              share








              New contributor




              Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.

























                0














                Well, basically you can't download the software directly to a USB stick. Therefor you must download it to another PC and transfer the files to your USB device. Even though your USB device must be a bootable USB drive.





                So, to convert a normal USB device into a bootable USB stick, you need a bootable software. The Rufus is the best software to create bootable USB without any frustration.
                Transferring the OS file is also include in the booting process.





                Resource: - https://www.rufusdownloads.com/rufus-download-for-linux.html





                share








                New contributor




                Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                Check out our Code of Conduct.























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  Well, basically you can't download the software directly to a USB stick. Therefor you must download it to another PC and transfer the files to your USB device. Even though your USB device must be a bootable USB drive.





                  So, to convert a normal USB device into a bootable USB stick, you need a bootable software. The Rufus is the best software to create bootable USB without any frustration.
                  Transferring the OS file is also include in the booting process.





                  Resource: - https://www.rufusdownloads.com/rufus-download-for-linux.html





                  share








                  New contributor




                  Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.










                  Well, basically you can't download the software directly to a USB stick. Therefor you must download it to another PC and transfer the files to your USB device. Even though your USB device must be a bootable USB drive.





                  So, to convert a normal USB device into a bootable USB stick, you need a bootable software. The Rufus is the best software to create bootable USB without any frustration.
                  Transferring the OS file is also include in the booting process.





                  Resource: - https://www.rufusdownloads.com/rufus-download-for-linux.html






                  share








                  New contributor




                  Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.








                  share


                  share






                  New contributor




                  Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.









                  answered 9 mins ago









                  Daniel RayDaniel Ray

                  1




                  1




                  New contributor




                  Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.





                  New contributor





                  Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






                  Daniel Ray is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
                  Check out our Code of Conduct.






























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