![]() ![]() It's also installed on my 500 GB portable SSD, with a mirror of those ISOs. there's just one single 128 GB USB key holding all Windows *and* Linux installs I need for myself, friends and family (and a few rescue ISOs I hope never to actually need), and a bunch I have as fallbacks (like Linux distros I have yet to test, or stuff I tested out as live boots). No longer do I keep several USB keys around with Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 10, etc. ![]() Windows is not (yet) capable of doing so. As usual, you can do live boots with Linux ISOs, without actually installing them first, to try out whether you like the distro. Sure, lots of 'em, actually! Just a quick Google Search on "ventoy guide" would have found you, amongst a bunch of other ones:Īs I said, the main advantage of using Ventoy is that you can use it to boot into all kinds of ISO formatted OSes/installs from a single USB key. We know spam when we see it and will delete it. This means things like repetitious posting of similar content, low-effort posts/memes and misleading/exaggerated titles on link posts. We all need to support each other to help GNU/Linux gaming grow. If it's a link post, think about writing a comment to tell us more - the more you engage with us, the more we like it. ![]() Remember you are talking to another human being.ĭevs and content producers: If you've ported your game to Linux or created some GNU/Linux-gaming-related content (reviews, videos, articles) then, so long as you're willing to engage with the community, please post it here. Heated discussions are fine, unwarranted insults are not. Please flair tech-support requests as tech support and re-flair them as answered if an answer has been found. What exactly did you do, and how, and with what version of what? How have you tried to troubleshoot the problem? Vague, low-effort tech-support requests may get removed. Include relevant details like logs, terminal output, system information. Tech-support requests should be useful to others: those who might run into the same problem as well as those who might be able to help. It is not (primarily) a tech-support forum. I don't know what's happening or what to do with it./r/Linux_Gaming is for informative and interesting gaming content, news and discussions. (I have a Windows partition on the tablet's own drive) Maybe there is a conflict between the 2 GRUB menu programs? I don't need a GRUB menu anyway when I boot from the USB It doesn't have the Windows option in grub like the one on the tablet's own drive. It is a different GRUB menu from the one installed on the tablet itself, it must be GRUB installed on the USB drive. Then it crashed at the next boot, and when I re-started it just brought up the grub menu, and it never does anything after loading the GRUB menu. (Crashed for too small space to install eventually with the 8GB drive.)Īfter installation to the 16 GB USB drive it worked a couple of times, flawlessly booted the tablet also and the OS seemed to be working fine running from the USB drive. It took a very long time to install, and it required a 16 GB USB drive because the 8GB turned out to be too small for some strange reason. It allows setting persistence storage for storing user files even after. When done copying, right click on the DVD drive and select Eject. Universal USB Installer is a simple tool to put Operating System on a USB drive. Navigate to the newly created DVD drive and copy all files and folders to the USB flash drive. Right click on archlinux- version -x8664.iso and select Mount. Well, I used a desktop computer because it was easier to remove the hard drive connections. Partition the USB flash drive and format it to FAT32. ![]()
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