'''What this guide accomplishes: Making a USB drive bootable to install Linux.''' |
[https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B6HsFZ5508HPazYtemRyWlY4Q1E/view?usp=sharing|Legacy guide w/ DVD burning steps (Note: OUDATED)] |
++ '''Important guide notes:''' ++ |
* This guide favors NEW USB drives due to how cheap small capacity drives are. If you want to reuse an old drive, then those will also work. |
* I have removed all information from this guide that targets DVD burning. Many new laptops (and some desktops) no longer include optical drives. |
* In a lot of cases, the optical drives that come with used equipment is likely already broken in some way. It isn't uncommon for the previous owner to neglect a failed optical drive. In regards to laptops this is even more common then it is on desktops. |
* In the case of a USB drive, they can be reformatted and reused multiple times before the flash memory wears out. DVD media is typically single use. |
++ '''IF YOUR SYSTEM HAS TROUBLE BOOTING FROM USB DIRECTLY:''' ++ |
'''Note:''' This problem typically only comes up for users with very old hardware (or systems with buggy USB boot implementations). It does NOT affect the majority of readers. |
If your system that has trouble booting from USB media directly, a CD boot ma manager can be used as a workaround. These guides cover how to use the boot manager option: |
[https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/How+to+use+PlopKexec+%28Subguide%29/54074|PlopKExec] |
[https://www.ifixit.com/Guide/How+to+use+Plop+Boot+Manager+(Subguide)/54031|Plop Boot Manager] |