Create Boot Usb Mac



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Boot from USB stick. Plug your the USB stick into computer. Boot or reboot system. Press F12 and enter boot menu when you see BIOS interface. (Some computers use Esc, F8, F10 for boot menu, you should see it on BIOS screen) Select your USB stick in the boot menu; Press Enter; System will restart and boot from the USB stick. Easily create ISO image from files or folders. Cons: Non-native user interface. Lower success rate on new USB drives. Lack support for CD or DVD. Rufus for Mac Alternative 3: Etcher. Etcher is another great Rufus alternative for Mac. It has been designed to allow you to easily and comfortably burn ISO images to USB drives and SD cards.

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Creating a bootable drive from an ISO file (disk image) allows you to do a lot of things, including installing an OS and helping you execute system repairs. However, specialized software is required to make sure that the boot information is copied along with the other files and folders in order to make it bootable. If you want to create a bootable USB drive from an ISO file, the following utilities are recommended. These tools each work on Windows, Mac and Linux computers, respectively. Choose the tool based on what platform you intend to create the bootable drive on.

Part 1: How to Create Bootable USB fro ISO (Windows 10/8/7)

Create Boot Usb Drive

Androidphonesoft ISO Burner can help you create a bootable USB drive from an ISO file quickly and without any errors. Trusted by millions of Windows users around the world, this intuitive software is not just for the experts. Even with limited knowledge of ISO files, you can easily turn your USB stick into a bootable drive in minutes.

The software's UI is clean and simple to understand, but don't be fooled by looks. It integrates extremely well with multiple file systems and supports a wide range of Windows versions, going from Windows XP all the way up to Windows 10. The best part is that user input is minimal because the software does all the hard work for you. No wonder it has such a huge fan following.

Step 1: Download the official version of ISO Burner from this website. Double click the .exe file and follow the instructions on the setup wizard to install the software on your Windows PC.

Step 2: As you will see, there are multiple functions to handle ISO disk images. Click on the one to create a boot disk from ISO file. It's the option that says 'Burn'.

Step 3: On the next window, which is a single-page interface, select your ISO source file and the destination drive, which is your USB flash drive. Leave all other default settings as they are if you're unsure, and click on the 'Burn' button. In a few moments, your bootable USB drive will be ready for use.

The software contains a lot of functionalities to make sure that your ISO file is burned properly to the drive, including ISO burning, creation, editing and extracting. A lot of effort has been taken to put all the heavy work in the background so the user has a lot less work to do.

Part 2: How to Make Bootable USB Flash Drive from ISO (Mac)

Etcher is a great tool to create a bootable drive on computers running Mac OS. There are some initial preparatory steps that you will need to execute before actually creating the boot drive from your ISO file. In this example, we will show you how to create an Ubuntu boot drive on Mac OS.

Step 1 : Install the Etcher software on your Mac computer after downloading it from the official source. You will also need to download a copy of the Ubuntu OS. You can get that here.

Step 2: You now have to prepare the USB stick by erasing whatever is already saved on it. If required, you can copy these files to your Mac computer as a backup. First, go to applications and utilities and click on 'Disk Utility' to launch it. Now insert the USB flash drive into one of your computer's USB ports. Once the device has been automatically detected, set the format as MS-DOS(FAT). The scheme should be set to GUID Partition Map. Finally, click on 'Erase'. While doing this, make sure that your USB flash drive has been selected in Disk Utility, or you may end up erasing another drive by mistake.

Step 3: Since you have already installed Etcher, you can now directly launch the software. If the software is blocked at installation time, go to System Preferences and then Security & Privacy. Here, click on the '‘Open Anyway' button next to the notification message in the bottom half of the window.

Step 4: In the Etcher interface, select the disk image, which is the Ubuntu ISO file that you downloaded earlier, then select the drive, which is your USB flash drive. Finally, click on 'Flash' and then enter the password for your computer to proceed with creating the boot drive.

Your bootable USB drive will soon be ready. You will now be able to use this USB stick to install a new OS on any desktop. The steps for using this software are fairly simple, but you have to be careful to take a backup of your USB data and make sure that you select the appropriate ISO image and the drive while flashing it.

Part 3: How to Make Bootable USB from ISO (Linux & Unix)

UNetbootin will let you create what is called a bootable Live USB drive. Essentially, this is an alternative to burning a boot disk on CD or DVD. It can be used for Ubuntu as well as other distributions of Linux such as Fedora, Gentoo, FreeDOS and several others.

Create Boot Usb Mac

Step 1: Download and install UNetbootin, and launch the application.

Step 2: If you do not have the ISO file for whichever Linux distribution you need, the software can do it for you. Assuming you already have the ISO file that you need, select the radio button against ‘Disk Image'. The dropdown should be set to ISO, and you can select the source file by clicking on the Ellipsis (...) button.

Step 3: Next, select the type of drive, which will be USB drive, and the appropriate drive name from the two dropdown menus at the bottom of the window. Once everything has been set up properly, click on '‘Ok' to initiate the creation of the bootable USB drive. You will be shown the progress in a stepwise manner. Once it is complete, you may remove your USB drive after ejecting it from the Finder window.

Conclusion:

Depending on what operating system your computer is running, you can use one of these fantastic disk image tools to create a bootable USB drive from ISO file. All of them are quite popular with users of the respective platforms..

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USB sticks are reusable and bootable media. If you have no writable DVD disk, you can write openSUSE installation image into a USB stick.

Tested on openSUSE

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  • 1Requirements
  • 2Create bootable USB stick

Requirements

Download installation images

You need to download a DVD or Network installation image (ISO file) before creating the installation USB stick.

See Portal:Installation.

A large capacity USB stick

To write DVD images, your USB stick must have at least 5 GB storage space.

To write Network images, your USB stick must have at least 100 MB storage space.

NOTE: All data in the USB stick will be erased! Backup all contents before writing the images.

A working PC

You need a working PC to run the bootable USB creation tool. ImageWriter can be run on openSUSE. UNetbootin can be run on other Linux distributions, Microsoft Windows and Apple macOS.

Create bootable USB stick

Imagewriter (openSUSE)

MacCreate
  1. Open YaST --> Software Management
  2. Search and install 'imagewriter' package
  3. Open 'SUSE Studio Imagewriter'
  4. Select downloaded image (*.iso file)
  5. Select the USB device
  6. Click 'Write' button

It takes several minutes or longer, depending on image size and hardware performance.

Done!

Universal USB Installer (Windows)

Note: Universal USB Installer only supports ISO files up to a maximum size of 4 GiB, which can be exceeded by some openSUSE DVD images. In this case, use UNetbootin for Windows as described below.

  1. Download Universal USB Installer (GPLv2)
  2. Run it. You will see a simple application window.
  3. Select Linux distribution 'openSUSE'.
  4. Select downloaded image.
  5. Select the USB device.
  6. Click 'Create' button.

It takes several minutes or longer, depending on image size and hardware performance.

Done!

UNetbootin (OpenSUSE)

  1. Install unetbootin via zypper

Create Boot Usb Mac Os

  1. Figure out which drive is your USB stick you wish to overwrite
  1. Wipe out the partition table of your USB stick to avoid issues with existing contents
  1. select /dev/sdc ( if your usb stick is /dev/sdc )
  2. p ( to print existing partitions )
  3. rm 1 ( to remove first partition )
  4. mklabel gpt ( to wipe device and make it GPT )
  5. mkpart primary ext4 1 -1 ( fill entire USB drive with ext4 partition )
  6. set 1 boot on ( make the new partition bootable )
  7. quit
  1. Unplug and replug the USB stick to have OpenSUSE automount /dev/sdc1
  2. Run unetbootin with environment variable to avoid UI bug
  1. Select radio button
  2. Click ... and open previously downloaded iso file
  3. Select Type: is not already selected
  4. Select Drive: if not already selected
  5. Click OK
  6. Exit unetbootin
  7. Eject the USB drive from UI, or run
to umount files

UNetbootin (Other Linux, Windows, Mac)

  1. Download UNetbootin (GPLv2)
  2. Run it
  3. Select 'Diskimage' radio button
  4. Select 'ISO' file type
  5. Click {{Key| ... } and open previously downloaded *.iso file
  6. Select device Type: 'USB Drive'
  7. Select Drive: 'Letter/Name of your USB stick' if not already selected
  8. Click OK

It takes several minutes or longer, depending on image size and hardware performance.

Done!

Boot from USB stick

  1. Plug your the USB stick into computer.
  2. Boot or reboot system.
  3. Press F12 and enter boot menu when you see BIOS interface. Quickly! (Some computers use Esc, F8, F10 for boot menu, you should see it on BIOS screen)
  4. Select your USB stick in the boot menu
  5. Press Enter

System will restart and boot from the USB stick. Then you can follow the normal DVD installation instructions.

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