![]() You can do this with the following command: sudo dd if=/path/to/image.dmg of=/dev/diskX bs=1m diskutil unmountDisk /dev/diskXįinally, it’s time to write your DMG file to your USB drive. To do this, use the following command replacing diskX with the identifier (for example, disk3 in the screenshot above). Now that you know your identifier, you need to unmount that particular drive so that you can write your DMG file to it. The size of the disk (for example, 8GB) may give it away too. If you gave it a name like “LINUX” then you should be able to spot it under the “NAME” column. You’re looking for the identifier for the USB drive you just formatted. Head back to Terminal and type the following to get a list of drives: diskutil list With your IMG file ready to go, it’s time to write to USB. Following on from the example above, you could type ~/Downloads/ubuntu. For ease, we’d recommend using the same location for both. Similarly, you’ll need to provide a destination in which the DMG will be placed (no need to add the “.dmg” extension). From the next version of the program, it became LinuxLive USB Creator, including support for a large amount of Linux distributions, among which we will be able to find Mythbuntu, Elive, CentOS, Lubuntu, Puppy Linux, Sabayon Linux, etc.Replace /path/to/downloaded.iso with the location of your downloaded Linux ISO, for example if ubuntu.iso is in your Downloads folder, you can type ~/Downloads/ubuntu.iso. In it, it includes a context menu for the program and the support for Ubuntu 9.04, as well as other improvements and corrections. This version of uSbuntu Live Creator was the last launched with this name by Thibaut Lauzière (known as Slÿm). Click on the lightning figure to start the installation. Configure some basic options to format the pendrive or hide the created files. ![]() Choose the persistence, that will allow us to save configurations and maintain some data on the pendrive even after rebooting. ![]() Select the original distribution (ISO or CD). The process is as simple as completing the following steps: Thus we can convert a simple pendrive into a bootable USB device that will allow us to launch the system without requiring the installation (only on computers that support booting from USB). The systems it supports are Ubuntu 8.10 and 9.04, Kubuntu 8.10 and 9.04, Xubuntu 8.10 and 9.04, Mint 6 and CrunchBang 8.10.02. Usbuntu Live Creator is a utility specifically developed to create Live USB devices. ![]()
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December 2022
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