How did you make the USB stick? Did you use UNetBootin? There's supposed to be something you can do with fdisk, but I'm too lazy to talk about that right now. (Don't worry, there's like a 90% chance someone else will add an answer detailing that method.) I'd recommend this alternative method - it's a little more 'hacker-ish' (you're basically tricking your computer into thinking the USB stick is a CD-ROM,) but it's the simplest method ever to make your bootable USB drive. Free Php Game Scripts.
Okay, first off, we're going to enter Crosh - ChrOme SHell is what I think it stands for. Anyway, it's basically useless, except to open up the 'real' Shell. Press CTRL- ALT- T to open it up, then type shell and press Enter. You'll now be presented with a $ with (maybe) some text before it. If you see this, congrats. If not, reread the instructions and try again.
Once you've gotten the Shell open, type cd Downloads (assuming you saved the ISO to your Downloads folder.) Now, we need to figure out what Device your USB stick is. It's usually /dev/sdb, if it's your computer's only USB stick plugged in, but it you're nervous, type fdisk -l - it'll reply with a bunch of tech stuff. Upload it to, then post the link as a comment below my post.
(NOTE: THE FOLLOWING COMMAND WILL WIPE ANYTHING CURRENTLY ON THE USB DRIVE. IF YOU HAVE ANYTHING VALUABLE ON IT, PLEASE REMOVE IT BEFORE CONTINUING.) Once you've figure out what your USB drive is, type: dd if=ubuntu-12.*-desktop*.iso of=/dev/sdb (except, edit the *'s to complete the filename.) This will 'burn' the Ubuntu disk image to your USB stick, as if it were a CD.
After reading this article, you will know how to install a portable Windows 8 version on a USB and take it with you anywhere you might need to use it. Yes, you read well: now you can take a copy of Windows 8 with you and run it on any Haswell based Chromebook. How to Install Chrome OS on Your Windows Laptop. You can turn your Windows laptop into a Chromebook, and it’s also possible to set up a dual-boot system using both operating.
In fact, it basically turns the USB stick into a CD, albeit one that runs significantly faster than your average optical drive. When it's finished, reboot your computer and spam F12 while it's booting up - it should ask you what you want to boot from. Choose USB CD-ROM or something similar.
Ta-da, you have just booted from the USB stick! If that didn't work, reboot and try a different F# key or perhaps a different boot device. There's not really much to screw up here, unless you enter the BIOS settings and break something (but that's highly unlikely.;) Just remember that after you have done this to the USB stick, you can't use it as a USB stick until you reformat it. Normal Windows utilities can't do this, use something like Gparted instead. Create a new partition table (if it asks, use msdos,) and then create a new partition with the Type as FAT32. JamesTheAwesomeDude, your instructions are good except for some little things.
In order to get to your downloads you can't just type cd Downloads its cd /home/user/*/Downloads without * *. Once in that directory, all you have to do it type NAMES The 1st USB drive plugged into an x86 Chromebook will be /dev/sdb The 1st SD Card plugged into an x86 Chromebook will be /dev/mmcblk0 The 1st USB drive plugged into an ARM Chromebook will be /dev/sda The 1st SD Card plugged into an ARM Chromebook will be /dev/mmcblk1 sudo dd if=put your os name here.iso of=dev/name of your usb bs=4 for example, (fo – user164960 Jun 6 '13 at 13:21 •.
I had issues simply changing *.iso to *. Hp Laserjet 1230 Driver Win7 on this page. bin--the Recovery Utility seemed to work, but the resulting USB wasn't always bootable. Fortunately there is an easy fix: • Right-click on the *.iso image you want to write • Choose the 'Zip selection' option from the menu this will just create a *.zip file of the *.iso image and should only take a couple minutes. Once that's done. • Open Recovery Utility • Select 'Use local image' from the settings menu, represented by a gear symbol • Navigate to the folder where the iso and zip file are located ('Downloads'??) You should see the *.zip file you just created listed in the resulting menu of files Recovery Utility can use. • Select the zip file, and let Recovery Utility work its magic. Once it's done writing to the USB drive. • Eject the USB and use it like any other bootable USB.