crwdns2933423:0crwdne2933423:0

crwdns2933805:0crwdne2933805:0

crwdns2933797:0Nickcrwdnd2933797:0crwdne2933797:0

crwdns2936043:0crwdne2936043:0 crwdns2933505:0crwdne2933505:0 Nick

crwdns2933769:0crwdne2933769:0
crwdns2933771:0crwdne2933771:0
crwdns2933801:0crwdne2933801:0

crwdns2933807:0crwdne2933807:0

-[title] Making the USB drive
-[* black] Select Diskimage and click the ***...*** button. This will allow you to select the image you want to use.
-[* black] After selecting the image you want, click OK. It will install on the flashdrive, and then the flashdrive will become bootable. Once this is done, you will be able to boot off of this.
-[* black] Once you have the ISO for the Linux distro, select it and load it in Unetbootin.
-[* black] ***If you require a CD to boot:*** Refer to [guide|54031|this guide] on how to do this with Plop Boot Manager in place of a DVD for the bootable ISO. If you have trouble with Plop Boot Manager, refer to this guide on [guide|54074|PlopKexec] instead.
-[* icon_reminder] ***Optional*** Ubuntu based Distributions allow you to have free space set aside for files in the OS. Unless you need it, there's no reason to use it.
+[title] Making the USB drive (Unetbootin)
+[* black] Select Diskimage and click the ***...*** button. This will allow you to select the image you want to use. Once you select the ISO you want to write to the USB stick, click ***OK*** to write it. This process also makes it bootable, so you do not have to correct this yourself.
+[* black] ***For users who require a CD/DVD to boot a OS or systems with buggy USB boot implementations:*** Refer to [guide|54031|this guide] on how to use Plop Boot Manager in place of a DVD so it boots like a DVD and will load. If you have trouble using Plop Boot Manager, refer to this guide on how to use [guide|54074|PlopKexec] instead.
+[* icon_reminder] ***Optional:*** Ubuntu based Distributions allow you to have free space set aside for files in the OS. Unless you need it, there's no reason to use it.