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“Missing Operating System” when booting from USB flash drive
Installing 11.10 on flash drive failedLubuntu from USBHow do I use a 4GB USB flash drive to install Ubuntu 12.10?Ubuntu boot USB flash does not workUbuntu will not boot from my external hard driveBooting and installing from USBUbuntu wont boot from usb (12.04.3)Failure to Install Ubuntu 12.04 on USB Flash DriveOperation System not found during USB bootUbuntu installer doesn't detect my USB drive
Arrghh...So frustrated with this problem.
Today I downloaded the most recent Ubuntu, being completely new to Linux. My plan is to run it on a partitioned drive with Windows 7 on a separate SSD.
Anyway I downloaded Ubuntu 13.10 ISO and THEN downloaded the Pen Drive Linux USB Installer. After using that to format my USB drive properly and then put the ISO on the drive, I restarted and entered the boot menu via the POST screen. I selected USB-HDD and it restarted as usual. But after POST it came up with the message "Missing Operating System" on a black screen. I have also tried putting the flash drive to highest boot priority in the BIOS, to no avail.
So does anyone have a solution to this problem? I've seen many questions on this before but nothing helps.
Regards
usb flash drive
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 1 hour ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
add a comment |
Arrghh...So frustrated with this problem.
Today I downloaded the most recent Ubuntu, being completely new to Linux. My plan is to run it on a partitioned drive with Windows 7 on a separate SSD.
Anyway I downloaded Ubuntu 13.10 ISO and THEN downloaded the Pen Drive Linux USB Installer. After using that to format my USB drive properly and then put the ISO on the drive, I restarted and entered the boot menu via the POST screen. I selected USB-HDD and it restarted as usual. But after POST it came up with the message "Missing Operating System" on a black screen. I have also tried putting the flash drive to highest boot priority in the BIOS, to no avail.
So does anyone have a solution to this problem? I've seen many questions on this before but nothing helps.
Regards
usb flash drive
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 1 hour ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
I used unetbootin but exactly the same thing happened. Anyway, what do you mean, msy? I haven't done anything like that. Are you sayin I should download another Linux distro?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:48
add a comment |
Arrghh...So frustrated with this problem.
Today I downloaded the most recent Ubuntu, being completely new to Linux. My plan is to run it on a partitioned drive with Windows 7 on a separate SSD.
Anyway I downloaded Ubuntu 13.10 ISO and THEN downloaded the Pen Drive Linux USB Installer. After using that to format my USB drive properly and then put the ISO on the drive, I restarted and entered the boot menu via the POST screen. I selected USB-HDD and it restarted as usual. But after POST it came up with the message "Missing Operating System" on a black screen. I have also tried putting the flash drive to highest boot priority in the BIOS, to no avail.
So does anyone have a solution to this problem? I've seen many questions on this before but nothing helps.
Regards
usb flash drive
Arrghh...So frustrated with this problem.
Today I downloaded the most recent Ubuntu, being completely new to Linux. My plan is to run it on a partitioned drive with Windows 7 on a separate SSD.
Anyway I downloaded Ubuntu 13.10 ISO and THEN downloaded the Pen Drive Linux USB Installer. After using that to format my USB drive properly and then put the ISO on the drive, I restarted and entered the boot menu via the POST screen. I selected USB-HDD and it restarted as usual. But after POST it came up with the message "Missing Operating System" on a black screen. I have also tried putting the flash drive to highest boot priority in the BIOS, to no avail.
So does anyone have a solution to this problem? I've seen many questions on this before but nothing helps.
Regards
usb flash drive
usb flash drive
asked Feb 1 '14 at 7:24
SystemBuilder2211SystemBuilder2211
111
111
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 1 hour ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
bumped to the homepage by Community♦ 1 hour ago
This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.
I used unetbootin but exactly the same thing happened. Anyway, what do you mean, msy? I haven't done anything like that. Are you sayin I should download another Linux distro?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:48
add a comment |
I used unetbootin but exactly the same thing happened. Anyway, what do you mean, msy? I haven't done anything like that. Are you sayin I should download another Linux distro?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:48
I used unetbootin but exactly the same thing happened. Anyway, what do you mean, msy? I haven't done anything like that. Are you sayin I should download another Linux distro?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:48
I used unetbootin but exactly the same thing happened. Anyway, what do you mean, msy? I haven't done anything like that. Are you sayin I should download another Linux distro?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:48
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
You could try using unetbootin to create the USB installer.
didn't work. do you think there could be something wrong with my computer?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:49
add a comment |
You shuold take an eye on these things:
- Don't connect other disk to your computer.
- Don't use unreliable tools.
- Don't download incomplete system files.
add a comment |
Try using etcher:
and make your own bootable ubuntu flash disk in 3 easy steps ...
add a comment |
Use Rufus over unetbootin. In the more recent...years(?) unetbootin has been causing issues with newer UEFI systems.
If you didn't partition your main drive, you definitely want to remove the USB, boot into Windows, and create either a recovery USB for your bootloader or a backup of your system before dual booting. Windows has the tools for both in the control panel.
To install Ubuntu, enter BIOS and change boot mode from UEFI to legacy so that your computer is able to read the USB-HDD option, or reformat the USB drive with Rufus and try again. Another option to check is if is USB virtualization on, to enable booting from USBs.
Just realized this was bumped from 2014...hope you fixed it!
add a comment |
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4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
You could try using unetbootin to create the USB installer.
didn't work. do you think there could be something wrong with my computer?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:49
add a comment |
You could try using unetbootin to create the USB installer.
didn't work. do you think there could be something wrong with my computer?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:49
add a comment |
You could try using unetbootin to create the USB installer.
You could try using unetbootin to create the USB installer.
answered Feb 1 '14 at 7:35
teeedubbteeedubb
565
565
didn't work. do you think there could be something wrong with my computer?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:49
add a comment |
didn't work. do you think there could be something wrong with my computer?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:49
didn't work. do you think there could be something wrong with my computer?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:49
didn't work. do you think there could be something wrong with my computer?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:49
add a comment |
You shuold take an eye on these things:
- Don't connect other disk to your computer.
- Don't use unreliable tools.
- Don't download incomplete system files.
add a comment |
You shuold take an eye on these things:
- Don't connect other disk to your computer.
- Don't use unreliable tools.
- Don't download incomplete system files.
add a comment |
You shuold take an eye on these things:
- Don't connect other disk to your computer.
- Don't use unreliable tools.
- Don't download incomplete system files.
You shuold take an eye on these things:
- Don't connect other disk to your computer.
- Don't use unreliable tools.
- Don't download incomplete system files.
answered Feb 1 '14 at 8:28
msymsy
41129
41129
add a comment |
add a comment |
Try using etcher:
and make your own bootable ubuntu flash disk in 3 easy steps ...
add a comment |
Try using etcher:
and make your own bootable ubuntu flash disk in 3 easy steps ...
add a comment |
Try using etcher:
and make your own bootable ubuntu flash disk in 3 easy steps ...
Try using etcher:
and make your own bootable ubuntu flash disk in 3 easy steps ...
answered Feb 19 at 6:27
ahooyeeahooyee
145128
145128
add a comment |
add a comment |
Use Rufus over unetbootin. In the more recent...years(?) unetbootin has been causing issues with newer UEFI systems.
If you didn't partition your main drive, you definitely want to remove the USB, boot into Windows, and create either a recovery USB for your bootloader or a backup of your system before dual booting. Windows has the tools for both in the control panel.
To install Ubuntu, enter BIOS and change boot mode from UEFI to legacy so that your computer is able to read the USB-HDD option, or reformat the USB drive with Rufus and try again. Another option to check is if is USB virtualization on, to enable booting from USBs.
Just realized this was bumped from 2014...hope you fixed it!
add a comment |
Use Rufus over unetbootin. In the more recent...years(?) unetbootin has been causing issues with newer UEFI systems.
If you didn't partition your main drive, you definitely want to remove the USB, boot into Windows, and create either a recovery USB for your bootloader or a backup of your system before dual booting. Windows has the tools for both in the control panel.
To install Ubuntu, enter BIOS and change boot mode from UEFI to legacy so that your computer is able to read the USB-HDD option, or reformat the USB drive with Rufus and try again. Another option to check is if is USB virtualization on, to enable booting from USBs.
Just realized this was bumped from 2014...hope you fixed it!
add a comment |
Use Rufus over unetbootin. In the more recent...years(?) unetbootin has been causing issues with newer UEFI systems.
If you didn't partition your main drive, you definitely want to remove the USB, boot into Windows, and create either a recovery USB for your bootloader or a backup of your system before dual booting. Windows has the tools for both in the control panel.
To install Ubuntu, enter BIOS and change boot mode from UEFI to legacy so that your computer is able to read the USB-HDD option, or reformat the USB drive with Rufus and try again. Another option to check is if is USB virtualization on, to enable booting from USBs.
Just realized this was bumped from 2014...hope you fixed it!
Use Rufus over unetbootin. In the more recent...years(?) unetbootin has been causing issues with newer UEFI systems.
If you didn't partition your main drive, you definitely want to remove the USB, boot into Windows, and create either a recovery USB for your bootloader or a backup of your system before dual booting. Windows has the tools for both in the control panel.
To install Ubuntu, enter BIOS and change boot mode from UEFI to legacy so that your computer is able to read the USB-HDD option, or reformat the USB drive with Rufus and try again. Another option to check is if is USB virtualization on, to enable booting from USBs.
Just realized this was bumped from 2014...hope you fixed it!
answered Feb 19 at 6:28
avisitoritseemsavisitoritseems
10312
10312
add a comment |
add a comment |
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I used unetbootin but exactly the same thing happened. Anyway, what do you mean, msy? I haven't done anything like that. Are you sayin I should download another Linux distro?
– SystemBuilder2211
Feb 1 '14 at 8:48