![]() Your USB drive will not be formatted, so your existing files should be safe, though backup important files just in case. * A USB drive, with slightly more free space than size of the ISO file you wish to use (roughly 700 MB for Ubuntu). Note that this will NOT work on Windows 95/98/ME. I have personally tested this on Windows XP, Windows 2008 圆4, Ubuntu 7.10 i386, and Ubuntu 8.04 amd64 the others were reported by users. * Windows 2000, XP, 2003, Vista, 2008, or newer (though this guide can be done from Linux as well, see site ()). ![]() The generated Ubuntu (or, optionally, another Linux distribution) LiveUSB functions identically to a standard Ubuntu LiveCD, so you can use it for Ubuntu installs or system recovery as you would a LiveCD, the only caveat being that your computer will need to be fairly modern (built after roughly 2002) in order to be able to boot a USB drive. This guide creates a LiveUSB () out of your standard 1 GB (or larger) USB flash drive entirely from within Windows, using a nice graphical application (no command lines), UNetbootin (). ![]()
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