There are a bunch of alternatives, such as unetbootin, but here too I experienced boot issues with the stick – depending on the source image. The chances are high that this USB stick will not boot (mostly due to a problem of internal naming of its own drive). The tech-savvy people comfortable using the command line would probably chose the dd (disk dump) command to copy the ISO to a USB stick: $ sudo dd if=~/Downloads/KNOPPIX_V9.1DVD-EN.iso of=/dev/sdd bs=4096īut Knoppix is an excellent example that this is not enough. Creating a bootable USB stick on Linux can sometimes be a pain, depending on the ISO image and how it is built.
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