By Bobby Jefferson on Thursday, 29 August 2024
Category: Tech News

How to create a bootable Linux USB drive

Javier Zayas Photography/Getty Images

Before you can enjoy the user-friendly, flexible, secure, and reliable Linux operating system, there's still one thing you need to handle first: installing the OS. 

Keep in mind that modern Linux installers are very easy. With a few quick clicks, you're on your way to enjoying the power, flexibility, and security of this open-source platform. 

Also: These 5 Linux file managers are way better than your default

The gateway to that open-source world is a bootable USB drive that allows you to install the OS on your computer.

Don't worry; even that step is simple. Let me show you how.

How to create your bootable USB drive

What you'll need: To create a bootable USB drive, you'll need the following:

A machine with a USB port. A USB flash drive with at least 16GB of space. A piece of software to create the bootable drive.

There are a lot of tools to help you create a bootable USB drive, such as Ventoy, Rufus, Etcher, dd, Fedora Media Writer, Popsicle, and more. The one tool I've used for years is UNetbootin, which is available for Linux, MacOS, and Windows. You can easily install UNetbootin by downloading the executable file to your desktop and running it. (It installs like most applications on both MacOS and Windows.) Even better, you can install UNetbootin on a Ubuntu-based distribution by first adding a new repository with the command:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:gezakovacs/ppa

Update apt with:

sudo apt-get update

Install UNetbootin with the command:

sudo apt-get install unetbootin -y

With UNetbootin installed, it's time to create your first bootable USB drive, ready to install Linux.

Also: The best Linux laptops

Creating a bootable USB drive with UNetbootin is very easy.

Screenshot by Jack Wallen/ZDNET

UNetbootin should be able to create your USB drive in under 15 minutes.

Screenshot by Jack Wallen/ZDNET

When the process completes, click Exit, safely eject the USB drive, and you're ready. You can now insert the USB drive into the machine that will serve as your new Linux desktop, boot the machine, and start installing the operating system.

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