

Anyway, I'm gonna boot it and let you know what happended. Next, insert the USB driver that will act as the Live drive. Then, double-click Startup Disk Creator to open the application. Sudo dd if=openSUSE-GNOME-LiveCD-x86_64-Build0754-Media.iso of=/dev/sdcħ03594496 bytes (704 MB) copied, 332.642 s, 2.1 MB/sĢ mb/s seems slow, it's a class 10 device that reads/writes at ~10mb/s. Multi Boot USB / MultiBoot USB / MultiBootUSB is a software / installer which allows user to install multiple Live Linux Distros in to a single USB drive /. Here’s a quick guide to creating a bootable USB drive on Ubuntu: In Ubuntu, click on the Show Application button and then use the search function to search for Startup Disk. Is this equivalent to what the "Ubuntu Disk Creator" does? Or the "extract to." option in the Archive Manager available by right-clicking the iso in nautilus? When it finishes, you can boot from this and openSUSE will automatically set up a persistent install. Now in the terminal cd to the place you downloaded the openSUSE-live.iso and type:

Now insert your usb stick and when it mounts, do anotherĪnd note the device name of the usb stick. UNetbootin allows you to create bootable Live USB drives for Ubuntu, Fedora, and other Linux distributions without burning a CD.

To change what the device is labeled is under the Label column. To see what the device is named look under the Device column. Usage To see what USB devices you can make into startup disks are listed under the Disk to use heading on the screen. Open a terminal and with no usb stick mounted, type: Startup Disk Creator is the default graphical utility for creating bootable USB media on Lubuntu. īEWARE THIS WILL OVERWRITE ANY DATA ON THE USB STICK To make an openSUSE live usb, all you need to do is use dd to copy the openSUSE-live.iso to your usb stick, but.
