What does it mean to make a bootable LiveUSB?












1















I have to install Ubuntu on a PC and I saw I have to make a bootable LiveUSB from the Ubuntu iso file. However, I can't understand what's the technical difference between making a bootable LiveUSB with a program like Rufus, and copying a .iso file on a USB. Why is not enough to copy it?










share|improve this question

























  • What do you mean by "mount the iso file on a USB"?

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago











  • Where did you see it? we don't mount the ISO on a USB, we make a bootable USB from an ISO...

    – Ravexina
    7 hours ago













  • I mean using a specific program, as Rufus, to "install"/ to "mount" (now, I'm not any more sure which is the right word) the ubuntu iso file on the USB.

    – holo gram
    7 hours ago











  • You changed the question to be almost off-topic. It is not about Ubuntu. You can search the Net to find out how computers boot, etc. It is not Ubuntu specific.

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago
















1















I have to install Ubuntu on a PC and I saw I have to make a bootable LiveUSB from the Ubuntu iso file. However, I can't understand what's the technical difference between making a bootable LiveUSB with a program like Rufus, and copying a .iso file on a USB. Why is not enough to copy it?










share|improve this question

























  • What do you mean by "mount the iso file on a USB"?

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago











  • Where did you see it? we don't mount the ISO on a USB, we make a bootable USB from an ISO...

    – Ravexina
    7 hours ago













  • I mean using a specific program, as Rufus, to "install"/ to "mount" (now, I'm not any more sure which is the right word) the ubuntu iso file on the USB.

    – holo gram
    7 hours ago











  • You changed the question to be almost off-topic. It is not about Ubuntu. You can search the Net to find out how computers boot, etc. It is not Ubuntu specific.

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago














1












1








1








I have to install Ubuntu on a PC and I saw I have to make a bootable LiveUSB from the Ubuntu iso file. However, I can't understand what's the technical difference between making a bootable LiveUSB with a program like Rufus, and copying a .iso file on a USB. Why is not enough to copy it?










share|improve this question
















I have to install Ubuntu on a PC and I saw I have to make a bootable LiveUSB from the Ubuntu iso file. However, I can't understand what's the technical difference between making a bootable LiveUSB with a program like Rufus, and copying a .iso file on a USB. Why is not enough to copy it?







usb mount iso






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 7 hours ago







holo gram

















asked 7 hours ago









holo gramholo gram

83




83













  • What do you mean by "mount the iso file on a USB"?

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago











  • Where did you see it? we don't mount the ISO on a USB, we make a bootable USB from an ISO...

    – Ravexina
    7 hours ago













  • I mean using a specific program, as Rufus, to "install"/ to "mount" (now, I'm not any more sure which is the right word) the ubuntu iso file on the USB.

    – holo gram
    7 hours ago











  • You changed the question to be almost off-topic. It is not about Ubuntu. You can search the Net to find out how computers boot, etc. It is not Ubuntu specific.

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago



















  • What do you mean by "mount the iso file on a USB"?

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago











  • Where did you see it? we don't mount the ISO on a USB, we make a bootable USB from an ISO...

    – Ravexina
    7 hours ago













  • I mean using a specific program, as Rufus, to "install"/ to "mount" (now, I'm not any more sure which is the right word) the ubuntu iso file on the USB.

    – holo gram
    7 hours ago











  • You changed the question to be almost off-topic. It is not about Ubuntu. You can search the Net to find out how computers boot, etc. It is not Ubuntu specific.

    – Pilot6
    7 hours ago

















What do you mean by "mount the iso file on a USB"?

– Pilot6
7 hours ago





What do you mean by "mount the iso file on a USB"?

– Pilot6
7 hours ago













Where did you see it? we don't mount the ISO on a USB, we make a bootable USB from an ISO...

– Ravexina
7 hours ago







Where did you see it? we don't mount the ISO on a USB, we make a bootable USB from an ISO...

– Ravexina
7 hours ago















I mean using a specific program, as Rufus, to "install"/ to "mount" (now, I'm not any more sure which is the right word) the ubuntu iso file on the USB.

– holo gram
7 hours ago





I mean using a specific program, as Rufus, to "install"/ to "mount" (now, I'm not any more sure which is the right word) the ubuntu iso file on the USB.

– holo gram
7 hours ago













You changed the question to be almost off-topic. It is not about Ubuntu. You can search the Net to find out how computers boot, etc. It is not Ubuntu specific.

– Pilot6
7 hours ago





You changed the question to be almost off-topic. It is not about Ubuntu. You can search the Net to find out how computers boot, etc. It is not Ubuntu specific.

– Pilot6
7 hours ago










6 Answers
6






active

oldest

votes


















3














If you want to install Ubuntu, you need to make a bootable LiveUSB.



iso is an image of a bootable disk.



If you simply copy an iso file to a USB disk, you won't be able to boot from it.



A bootable media has specific data in specific sectors, so BIOS or UEFI can start a system from it.






share|improve this answer


























  • This doesn't match my experience. I installed Ubuntu on a new laptop less than a week ago, with an USB stick I created simply by dd if=downloaded.iso of=/dev/sdc, no special magical software. It booted just fine.

    – Henning Makholm
    2 hours ago



















2














you have to burn it to the flash drive using something like etcher






share|improve this answer








New contributor




qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




























    1














    Creating an UEFI bootable Linux USB stick



    We will create a bootable USB stick with Linux by starting from a Linux distribution’s ISO. Since we want to create a USB stick that will be able to boot a UEFI system, we will require an ISO that can do this. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader.



    Make sure that you download the AMD64 version of the ISO! You can download this ISO from the following link:  http://releases.ubuntu.com/18.04/
    To create the bootable USB stick from the ISO, we use the Rufus tool on Windows. You can download Rufus from official website https://rufus.akeo.ie and version is Rufus 3.3.400 whose size is 0.98 MB.



    Use Rufus as follows:


    1. Click “Select” to order to browse to the location of Ubuntu ISO file and select the same.

    2. Set “Partition scheme” to “GPT” which is the default partition scheme for UEFI computer.

    3. Select “Target system” as “UEFI (non CSM).

    4. Set “New Valume Label” as “Ubuntu-18.04.2-desktop-amd64-Bionic Beaver”

    5. Select “File system” to be “FAT32 (default)”

    6. Set “Cluster size” to “4096 bytes (default)”

    7. Enable “Qick format” and select “2 passes” as show in the screenshot below.

    8. Make sure that Rufus hasn’t changed the partitioning scheme after you have selected the ISO.

    9. Click Start button to prepare bootable Ubuntu USB stick.



    enter image description hereFigure-1: Ubuntu 18.04.02 Bionic Beaver



    When Rufus is ready, you will have your USB stick with a UEFI bootloader. Booting a machine with this stick allows you to boot Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS live session so that you have access to all default Ubuntu utilities.
    Ubuntu ISO files can be downloaded from the following URL: http://releases.ubuntu.com



    How can I upgrade ubuntu using bootable USB?



    You just need to access bios of your PC, and boot from bootable USB, then select "install Ubuntu"



    Then a bunch of options will appear (see the image below). Select "upgrade ubuntu" . Done



    enter image description hereFigure-2: Installation type






    share|improve this answer


























    • The question wan not "How to make a bootable USB", but why you need a program to make it, etc.

      – Pilot6
      7 hours ago











    • Answer is their in the first para @Pilot6. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader

      – Marmayogi
      6 hours ago











    • EFI is not always required.

      – Pilot6
      6 hours ago











    • The context is that you need a bootloader, may not be EFI. You may say GRUB.

      – Marmayogi
      6 hours ago











    • This is a good reference for the above topic: Creating EFI-Bootable USB Drives.

      – karel
      6 hours ago





















    0














    You don't burn an ISO to a UFD. You do that with CDs and DVDs. Basically you don't need Rufus or any 3rd party USB booting tool as so many keep insisting.



    If you are making this from Windows 10, first of all format the UFD with FAT32 using diskmgmt.msc from a command prompt (cmd) with administrator privileges. You right click on the UFD and format it as described. Then mount the ISO file by right clicking it and choosing mount option. When open just copy the files over to the UFD and it will be bootable.






    share|improve this answer































      0














      The .iso is a disk image file, and if it's directly flashed to the disk, your computer won't be able to read it as bootable. The flashing just reads the .iso and puts it in a format that the computer can boot from. In a way, it's like a .zip archive in that the stuff it contains has to be extracted to be usable.






      share|improve this answer































        -1














        You can simply burn the .iso file of OS into DVD or USB and with that you can run an OS and do your job , but why ???
        Many reasons like : One of your important OS file is missing and your OS won't work , so you can boot for example Ubuntu from USB and go to that file and undo the changes or fix it and etc.
        Sometimes you need to do something and you can't be able to access your laptop to do your job , by having a bootable USB that has Ubuntu on it you can simply run ubuntu and work with it without installing ubuntu on that system (the OS boot from your USB not Hard-drive)






        share|improve this answer























          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function() {
          var channelOptions = {
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "89"
          };
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
          createEditor();
          });
          }
          else {
          createEditor();
          }
          });

          function createEditor() {
          StackExchange.prepareEditor({
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: true,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: 10,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader: {
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          },
          onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          });


          }
          });














          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function () {
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2faskubuntu.com%2fquestions%2f1125710%2fwhat-does-it-mean-to-make-a-bootable-liveusb%23new-answer', 'question_page');
          }
          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes








          6 Answers
          6






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          3














          If you want to install Ubuntu, you need to make a bootable LiveUSB.



          iso is an image of a bootable disk.



          If you simply copy an iso file to a USB disk, you won't be able to boot from it.



          A bootable media has specific data in specific sectors, so BIOS or UEFI can start a system from it.






          share|improve this answer


























          • This doesn't match my experience. I installed Ubuntu on a new laptop less than a week ago, with an USB stick I created simply by dd if=downloaded.iso of=/dev/sdc, no special magical software. It booted just fine.

            – Henning Makholm
            2 hours ago
















          3














          If you want to install Ubuntu, you need to make a bootable LiveUSB.



          iso is an image of a bootable disk.



          If you simply copy an iso file to a USB disk, you won't be able to boot from it.



          A bootable media has specific data in specific sectors, so BIOS or UEFI can start a system from it.






          share|improve this answer


























          • This doesn't match my experience. I installed Ubuntu on a new laptop less than a week ago, with an USB stick I created simply by dd if=downloaded.iso of=/dev/sdc, no special magical software. It booted just fine.

            – Henning Makholm
            2 hours ago














          3












          3








          3







          If you want to install Ubuntu, you need to make a bootable LiveUSB.



          iso is an image of a bootable disk.



          If you simply copy an iso file to a USB disk, you won't be able to boot from it.



          A bootable media has specific data in specific sectors, so BIOS or UEFI can start a system from it.






          share|improve this answer















          If you want to install Ubuntu, you need to make a bootable LiveUSB.



          iso is an image of a bootable disk.



          If you simply copy an iso file to a USB disk, you won't be able to boot from it.



          A bootable media has specific data in specific sectors, so BIOS or UEFI can start a system from it.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 7 hours ago

























          answered 7 hours ago









          Pilot6Pilot6

          53.3k15109198




          53.3k15109198













          • This doesn't match my experience. I installed Ubuntu on a new laptop less than a week ago, with an USB stick I created simply by dd if=downloaded.iso of=/dev/sdc, no special magical software. It booted just fine.

            – Henning Makholm
            2 hours ago



















          • This doesn't match my experience. I installed Ubuntu on a new laptop less than a week ago, with an USB stick I created simply by dd if=downloaded.iso of=/dev/sdc, no special magical software. It booted just fine.

            – Henning Makholm
            2 hours ago

















          This doesn't match my experience. I installed Ubuntu on a new laptop less than a week ago, with an USB stick I created simply by dd if=downloaded.iso of=/dev/sdc, no special magical software. It booted just fine.

          – Henning Makholm
          2 hours ago





          This doesn't match my experience. I installed Ubuntu on a new laptop less than a week ago, with an USB stick I created simply by dd if=downloaded.iso of=/dev/sdc, no special magical software. It booted just fine.

          – Henning Makholm
          2 hours ago













          2














          you have to burn it to the flash drive using something like etcher






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.

























            2














            you have to burn it to the flash drive using something like etcher






            share|improve this answer








            New contributor




            qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
            Check out our Code of Conduct.























              2












              2








              2







              you have to burn it to the flash drive using something like etcher






              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.










              you have to burn it to the flash drive using something like etcher







              share|improve this answer








              New contributor




              qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.









              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer






              New contributor




              qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.









              answered 7 hours ago









              qblueRed42qblueRed42

              212




              212




              New contributor




              qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.





              New contributor





              qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.






              qblueRed42 is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
              Check out our Code of Conduct.























                  1














                  Creating an UEFI bootable Linux USB stick



                  We will create a bootable USB stick with Linux by starting from a Linux distribution’s ISO. Since we want to create a USB stick that will be able to boot a UEFI system, we will require an ISO that can do this. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader.



                  Make sure that you download the AMD64 version of the ISO! You can download this ISO from the following link:  http://releases.ubuntu.com/18.04/
                  To create the bootable USB stick from the ISO, we use the Rufus tool on Windows. You can download Rufus from official website https://rufus.akeo.ie and version is Rufus 3.3.400 whose size is 0.98 MB.



                  Use Rufus as follows:


                  1. Click “Select” to order to browse to the location of Ubuntu ISO file and select the same.

                  2. Set “Partition scheme” to “GPT” which is the default partition scheme for UEFI computer.

                  3. Select “Target system” as “UEFI (non CSM).

                  4. Set “New Valume Label” as “Ubuntu-18.04.2-desktop-amd64-Bionic Beaver”

                  5. Select “File system” to be “FAT32 (default)”

                  6. Set “Cluster size” to “4096 bytes (default)”

                  7. Enable “Qick format” and select “2 passes” as show in the screenshot below.

                  8. Make sure that Rufus hasn’t changed the partitioning scheme after you have selected the ISO.

                  9. Click Start button to prepare bootable Ubuntu USB stick.



                  enter image description hereFigure-1: Ubuntu 18.04.02 Bionic Beaver



                  When Rufus is ready, you will have your USB stick with a UEFI bootloader. Booting a machine with this stick allows you to boot Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS live session so that you have access to all default Ubuntu utilities.
                  Ubuntu ISO files can be downloaded from the following URL: http://releases.ubuntu.com



                  How can I upgrade ubuntu using bootable USB?



                  You just need to access bios of your PC, and boot from bootable USB, then select "install Ubuntu"



                  Then a bunch of options will appear (see the image below). Select "upgrade ubuntu" . Done



                  enter image description hereFigure-2: Installation type






                  share|improve this answer


























                  • The question wan not "How to make a bootable USB", but why you need a program to make it, etc.

                    – Pilot6
                    7 hours ago











                  • Answer is their in the first para @Pilot6. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • EFI is not always required.

                    – Pilot6
                    6 hours ago











                  • The context is that you need a bootloader, may not be EFI. You may say GRUB.

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • This is a good reference for the above topic: Creating EFI-Bootable USB Drives.

                    – karel
                    6 hours ago


















                  1














                  Creating an UEFI bootable Linux USB stick



                  We will create a bootable USB stick with Linux by starting from a Linux distribution’s ISO. Since we want to create a USB stick that will be able to boot a UEFI system, we will require an ISO that can do this. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader.



                  Make sure that you download the AMD64 version of the ISO! You can download this ISO from the following link:  http://releases.ubuntu.com/18.04/
                  To create the bootable USB stick from the ISO, we use the Rufus tool on Windows. You can download Rufus from official website https://rufus.akeo.ie and version is Rufus 3.3.400 whose size is 0.98 MB.



                  Use Rufus as follows:


                  1. Click “Select” to order to browse to the location of Ubuntu ISO file and select the same.

                  2. Set “Partition scheme” to “GPT” which is the default partition scheme for UEFI computer.

                  3. Select “Target system” as “UEFI (non CSM).

                  4. Set “New Valume Label” as “Ubuntu-18.04.2-desktop-amd64-Bionic Beaver”

                  5. Select “File system” to be “FAT32 (default)”

                  6. Set “Cluster size” to “4096 bytes (default)”

                  7. Enable “Qick format” and select “2 passes” as show in the screenshot below.

                  8. Make sure that Rufus hasn’t changed the partitioning scheme after you have selected the ISO.

                  9. Click Start button to prepare bootable Ubuntu USB stick.



                  enter image description hereFigure-1: Ubuntu 18.04.02 Bionic Beaver



                  When Rufus is ready, you will have your USB stick with a UEFI bootloader. Booting a machine with this stick allows you to boot Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS live session so that you have access to all default Ubuntu utilities.
                  Ubuntu ISO files can be downloaded from the following URL: http://releases.ubuntu.com



                  How can I upgrade ubuntu using bootable USB?



                  You just need to access bios of your PC, and boot from bootable USB, then select "install Ubuntu"



                  Then a bunch of options will appear (see the image below). Select "upgrade ubuntu" . Done



                  enter image description hereFigure-2: Installation type






                  share|improve this answer


























                  • The question wan not "How to make a bootable USB", but why you need a program to make it, etc.

                    – Pilot6
                    7 hours ago











                  • Answer is their in the first para @Pilot6. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • EFI is not always required.

                    – Pilot6
                    6 hours ago











                  • The context is that you need a bootloader, may not be EFI. You may say GRUB.

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • This is a good reference for the above topic: Creating EFI-Bootable USB Drives.

                    – karel
                    6 hours ago
















                  1












                  1








                  1







                  Creating an UEFI bootable Linux USB stick



                  We will create a bootable USB stick with Linux by starting from a Linux distribution’s ISO. Since we want to create a USB stick that will be able to boot a UEFI system, we will require an ISO that can do this. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader.



                  Make sure that you download the AMD64 version of the ISO! You can download this ISO from the following link:  http://releases.ubuntu.com/18.04/
                  To create the bootable USB stick from the ISO, we use the Rufus tool on Windows. You can download Rufus from official website https://rufus.akeo.ie and version is Rufus 3.3.400 whose size is 0.98 MB.



                  Use Rufus as follows:


                  1. Click “Select” to order to browse to the location of Ubuntu ISO file and select the same.

                  2. Set “Partition scheme” to “GPT” which is the default partition scheme for UEFI computer.

                  3. Select “Target system” as “UEFI (non CSM).

                  4. Set “New Valume Label” as “Ubuntu-18.04.2-desktop-amd64-Bionic Beaver”

                  5. Select “File system” to be “FAT32 (default)”

                  6. Set “Cluster size” to “4096 bytes (default)”

                  7. Enable “Qick format” and select “2 passes” as show in the screenshot below.

                  8. Make sure that Rufus hasn’t changed the partitioning scheme after you have selected the ISO.

                  9. Click Start button to prepare bootable Ubuntu USB stick.



                  enter image description hereFigure-1: Ubuntu 18.04.02 Bionic Beaver



                  When Rufus is ready, you will have your USB stick with a UEFI bootloader. Booting a machine with this stick allows you to boot Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS live session so that you have access to all default Ubuntu utilities.
                  Ubuntu ISO files can be downloaded from the following URL: http://releases.ubuntu.com



                  How can I upgrade ubuntu using bootable USB?



                  You just need to access bios of your PC, and boot from bootable USB, then select "install Ubuntu"



                  Then a bunch of options will appear (see the image below). Select "upgrade ubuntu" . Done



                  enter image description hereFigure-2: Installation type






                  share|improve this answer















                  Creating an UEFI bootable Linux USB stick



                  We will create a bootable USB stick with Linux by starting from a Linux distribution’s ISO. Since we want to create a USB stick that will be able to boot a UEFI system, we will require an ISO that can do this. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader.



                  Make sure that you download the AMD64 version of the ISO! You can download this ISO from the following link:  http://releases.ubuntu.com/18.04/
                  To create the bootable USB stick from the ISO, we use the Rufus tool on Windows. You can download Rufus from official website https://rufus.akeo.ie and version is Rufus 3.3.400 whose size is 0.98 MB.



                  Use Rufus as follows:


                  1. Click “Select” to order to browse to the location of Ubuntu ISO file and select the same.

                  2. Set “Partition scheme” to “GPT” which is the default partition scheme for UEFI computer.

                  3. Select “Target system” as “UEFI (non CSM).

                  4. Set “New Valume Label” as “Ubuntu-18.04.2-desktop-amd64-Bionic Beaver”

                  5. Select “File system” to be “FAT32 (default)”

                  6. Set “Cluster size” to “4096 bytes (default)”

                  7. Enable “Qick format” and select “2 passes” as show in the screenshot below.

                  8. Make sure that Rufus hasn’t changed the partitioning scheme after you have selected the ISO.

                  9. Click Start button to prepare bootable Ubuntu USB stick.



                  enter image description hereFigure-1: Ubuntu 18.04.02 Bionic Beaver



                  When Rufus is ready, you will have your USB stick with a UEFI bootloader. Booting a machine with this stick allows you to boot Ubuntu 18.04.1 LTS live session so that you have access to all default Ubuntu utilities.
                  Ubuntu ISO files can be downloaded from the following URL: http://releases.ubuntu.com



                  How can I upgrade ubuntu using bootable USB?



                  You just need to access bios of your PC, and boot from bootable USB, then select "install Ubuntu"



                  Then a bunch of options will appear (see the image below). Select "upgrade ubuntu" . Done



                  enter image description hereFigure-2: Installation type







                  share|improve this answer














                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer








                  edited 5 mins ago

























                  answered 7 hours ago









                  MarmayogiMarmayogi

                  40925




                  40925













                  • The question wan not "How to make a bootable USB", but why you need a program to make it, etc.

                    – Pilot6
                    7 hours ago











                  • Answer is their in the first para @Pilot6. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • EFI is not always required.

                    – Pilot6
                    6 hours ago











                  • The context is that you need a bootloader, may not be EFI. You may say GRUB.

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • This is a good reference for the above topic: Creating EFI-Bootable USB Drives.

                    – karel
                    6 hours ago





















                  • The question wan not "How to make a bootable USB", but why you need a program to make it, etc.

                    – Pilot6
                    7 hours ago











                  • Answer is their in the first para @Pilot6. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • EFI is not always required.

                    – Pilot6
                    6 hours ago











                  • The context is that you need a bootloader, may not be EFI. You may say GRUB.

                    – Marmayogi
                    6 hours ago











                  • This is a good reference for the above topic: Creating EFI-Bootable USB Drives.

                    – karel
                    6 hours ago



















                  The question wan not "How to make a bootable USB", but why you need a program to make it, etc.

                  – Pilot6
                  7 hours ago





                  The question wan not "How to make a bootable USB", but why you need a program to make it, etc.

                  – Pilot6
                  7 hours ago













                  Answer is their in the first para @Pilot6. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader

                  – Marmayogi
                  6 hours ago





                  Answer is their in the first para @Pilot6. The ISO requires a special EFI bootloader

                  – Marmayogi
                  6 hours ago













                  EFI is not always required.

                  – Pilot6
                  6 hours ago





                  EFI is not always required.

                  – Pilot6
                  6 hours ago













                  The context is that you need a bootloader, may not be EFI. You may say GRUB.

                  – Marmayogi
                  6 hours ago





                  The context is that you need a bootloader, may not be EFI. You may say GRUB.

                  – Marmayogi
                  6 hours ago













                  This is a good reference for the above topic: Creating EFI-Bootable USB Drives.

                  – karel
                  6 hours ago







                  This is a good reference for the above topic: Creating EFI-Bootable USB Drives.

                  – karel
                  6 hours ago













                  0














                  You don't burn an ISO to a UFD. You do that with CDs and DVDs. Basically you don't need Rufus or any 3rd party USB booting tool as so many keep insisting.



                  If you are making this from Windows 10, first of all format the UFD with FAT32 using diskmgmt.msc from a command prompt (cmd) with administrator privileges. You right click on the UFD and format it as described. Then mount the ISO file by right clicking it and choosing mount option. When open just copy the files over to the UFD and it will be bootable.






                  share|improve this answer




























                    0














                    You don't burn an ISO to a UFD. You do that with CDs and DVDs. Basically you don't need Rufus or any 3rd party USB booting tool as so many keep insisting.



                    If you are making this from Windows 10, first of all format the UFD with FAT32 using diskmgmt.msc from a command prompt (cmd) with administrator privileges. You right click on the UFD and format it as described. Then mount the ISO file by right clicking it and choosing mount option. When open just copy the files over to the UFD and it will be bootable.






                    share|improve this answer


























                      0












                      0








                      0







                      You don't burn an ISO to a UFD. You do that with CDs and DVDs. Basically you don't need Rufus or any 3rd party USB booting tool as so many keep insisting.



                      If you are making this from Windows 10, first of all format the UFD with FAT32 using diskmgmt.msc from a command prompt (cmd) with administrator privileges. You right click on the UFD and format it as described. Then mount the ISO file by right clicking it and choosing mount option. When open just copy the files over to the UFD and it will be bootable.






                      share|improve this answer













                      You don't burn an ISO to a UFD. You do that with CDs and DVDs. Basically you don't need Rufus or any 3rd party USB booting tool as so many keep insisting.



                      If you are making this from Windows 10, first of all format the UFD with FAT32 using diskmgmt.msc from a command prompt (cmd) with administrator privileges. You right click on the UFD and format it as described. Then mount the ISO file by right clicking it and choosing mount option. When open just copy the files over to the UFD and it will be bootable.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 6 hours ago









                      Paul BensonPaul Benson

                      483129




                      483129























                          0














                          The .iso is a disk image file, and if it's directly flashed to the disk, your computer won't be able to read it as bootable. The flashing just reads the .iso and puts it in a format that the computer can boot from. In a way, it's like a .zip archive in that the stuff it contains has to be extracted to be usable.






                          share|improve this answer




























                            0














                            The .iso is a disk image file, and if it's directly flashed to the disk, your computer won't be able to read it as bootable. The flashing just reads the .iso and puts it in a format that the computer can boot from. In a way, it's like a .zip archive in that the stuff it contains has to be extracted to be usable.






                            share|improve this answer


























                              0












                              0








                              0







                              The .iso is a disk image file, and if it's directly flashed to the disk, your computer won't be able to read it as bootable. The flashing just reads the .iso and puts it in a format that the computer can boot from. In a way, it's like a .zip archive in that the stuff it contains has to be extracted to be usable.






                              share|improve this answer













                              The .iso is a disk image file, and if it's directly flashed to the disk, your computer won't be able to read it as bootable. The flashing just reads the .iso and puts it in a format that the computer can boot from. In a way, it's like a .zip archive in that the stuff it contains has to be extracted to be usable.







                              share|improve this answer












                              share|improve this answer



                              share|improve this answer










                              answered 3 hours ago









                              Sean ZhengSean Zheng

                              154




                              154























                                  -1














                                  You can simply burn the .iso file of OS into DVD or USB and with that you can run an OS and do your job , but why ???
                                  Many reasons like : One of your important OS file is missing and your OS won't work , so you can boot for example Ubuntu from USB and go to that file and undo the changes or fix it and etc.
                                  Sometimes you need to do something and you can't be able to access your laptop to do your job , by having a bootable USB that has Ubuntu on it you can simply run ubuntu and work with it without installing ubuntu on that system (the OS boot from your USB not Hard-drive)






                                  share|improve this answer




























                                    -1














                                    You can simply burn the .iso file of OS into DVD or USB and with that you can run an OS and do your job , but why ???
                                    Many reasons like : One of your important OS file is missing and your OS won't work , so you can boot for example Ubuntu from USB and go to that file and undo the changes or fix it and etc.
                                    Sometimes you need to do something and you can't be able to access your laptop to do your job , by having a bootable USB that has Ubuntu on it you can simply run ubuntu and work with it without installing ubuntu on that system (the OS boot from your USB not Hard-drive)






                                    share|improve this answer


























                                      -1












                                      -1








                                      -1







                                      You can simply burn the .iso file of OS into DVD or USB and with that you can run an OS and do your job , but why ???
                                      Many reasons like : One of your important OS file is missing and your OS won't work , so you can boot for example Ubuntu from USB and go to that file and undo the changes or fix it and etc.
                                      Sometimes you need to do something and you can't be able to access your laptop to do your job , by having a bootable USB that has Ubuntu on it you can simply run ubuntu and work with it without installing ubuntu on that system (the OS boot from your USB not Hard-drive)






                                      share|improve this answer













                                      You can simply burn the .iso file of OS into DVD or USB and with that you can run an OS and do your job , but why ???
                                      Many reasons like : One of your important OS file is missing and your OS won't work , so you can boot for example Ubuntu from USB and go to that file and undo the changes or fix it and etc.
                                      Sometimes you need to do something and you can't be able to access your laptop to do your job , by having a bootable USB that has Ubuntu on it you can simply run ubuntu and work with it without installing ubuntu on that system (the OS boot from your USB not Hard-drive)







                                      share|improve this answer












                                      share|improve this answer



                                      share|improve this answer










                                      answered 3 hours ago









                                      AfshinAfshin

                                      245




                                      245






























                                          draft saved

                                          draft discarded




















































                                          Thanks for contributing an answer to Ask Ubuntu!


                                          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                                          But avoid



                                          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                                          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


                                          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                                          draft saved


                                          draft discarded














                                          StackExchange.ready(
                                          function () {
                                          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2faskubuntu.com%2fquestions%2f1125710%2fwhat-does-it-mean-to-make-a-bootable-liveusb%23new-answer', 'question_page');
                                          }
                                          );

                                          Post as a guest















                                          Required, but never shown





















































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown

































                                          Required, but never shown














                                          Required, but never shown












                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Required, but never shown







                                          Popular posts from this blog

                                          How to make a Squid Proxy server?

                                          Is this a new Fibonacci Identity?

                                          Touch on Surface Book