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I downloaded Ubuntu but I can't find the ISO file
I downloaded Lubuntu, but can't burn the ISO filemd5sum of ubuntu 12.04 i386 desktop .iso does not matchWhere to find the ISO file to be burned on a CD/DVD?What is the downloaded ISO file?Which is the correct ISO file to download Ubuntu 13.04 on a laptop with an Intel Core i5 processor?Help please? Downloaded ubuntu 13.04 onto usb and can't find .iso file in order to create a bootable usbThe Ubuntu 14.04 isoDownloaded ubuntu from this site but it is not an ISO file. How to make it bootable?Ubuntu iso image - different size when downloading via torrent or from ubuntu.comUbuntu ISO download issueUbuntu 16.04 ISO image is not bootable
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I have downloaded Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS from http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop.
In order to create a bootable DVD it is asking for an ISO image which I haven't found in the download folder.
Where is the .iso file?
iso
|
show 5 more comments
I have downloaded Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS from http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop.
In order to create a bootable DVD it is asking for an ISO image which I haven't found in the download folder.
Where is the .iso file?
iso
8
The iso is what you downloaded... The file you opened which contains the files you screenshotted - that's the iso.
– Tim
Aug 17 '16 at 16:57
1
Tim is totally right. Windows hides file extensions (just in case you didn't know) and it looks like you have some kind op plugin that manages to open them in Windows Explorer.So, give us a screenshot of D:Ubuntu insteadAlso, go enable extensions.
– jawtheshark
Aug 17 '16 at 17:04
2
Your utorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded content upon finishing the download job. And it opens the iso file with Windows Explorer, because the iso file-type is associated to Win Explorer. That's why you see the actual content of the iso file, and not the iso itself. Go one level up in Win Explorer and you will see the iso file.
– ipse lute
Aug 17 '16 at 17:10
1
@jawtheshark Windows 8 and later can natively mount ISOs.
– TheWanderer
Aug 18 '16 at 4:36
1
@Zacharee1 Except of course this is clearly Windows 7.
– jawtheshark
Aug 18 '16 at 6:49
|
show 5 more comments
I have downloaded Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS from http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop.
In order to create a bootable DVD it is asking for an ISO image which I haven't found in the download folder.
Where is the .iso file?
iso
I have downloaded Ubuntu 16.04.1 LTS from http://www.ubuntu.com/download/desktop.
In order to create a bootable DVD it is asking for an ISO image which I haven't found in the download folder.
Where is the .iso file?
iso
iso
edited Aug 21 '16 at 18:18
Panagiotis Tabakis
1,227719
1,227719
asked Aug 17 '16 at 16:53
SASIPREETHAM KSASIPREETHAM K
612
612
8
The iso is what you downloaded... The file you opened which contains the files you screenshotted - that's the iso.
– Tim
Aug 17 '16 at 16:57
1
Tim is totally right. Windows hides file extensions (just in case you didn't know) and it looks like you have some kind op plugin that manages to open them in Windows Explorer.So, give us a screenshot of D:Ubuntu insteadAlso, go enable extensions.
– jawtheshark
Aug 17 '16 at 17:04
2
Your utorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded content upon finishing the download job. And it opens the iso file with Windows Explorer, because the iso file-type is associated to Win Explorer. That's why you see the actual content of the iso file, and not the iso itself. Go one level up in Win Explorer and you will see the iso file.
– ipse lute
Aug 17 '16 at 17:10
1
@jawtheshark Windows 8 and later can natively mount ISOs.
– TheWanderer
Aug 18 '16 at 4:36
1
@Zacharee1 Except of course this is clearly Windows 7.
– jawtheshark
Aug 18 '16 at 6:49
|
show 5 more comments
8
The iso is what you downloaded... The file you opened which contains the files you screenshotted - that's the iso.
– Tim
Aug 17 '16 at 16:57
1
Tim is totally right. Windows hides file extensions (just in case you didn't know) and it looks like you have some kind op plugin that manages to open them in Windows Explorer.So, give us a screenshot of D:Ubuntu insteadAlso, go enable extensions.
– jawtheshark
Aug 17 '16 at 17:04
2
Your utorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded content upon finishing the download job. And it opens the iso file with Windows Explorer, because the iso file-type is associated to Win Explorer. That's why you see the actual content of the iso file, and not the iso itself. Go one level up in Win Explorer and you will see the iso file.
– ipse lute
Aug 17 '16 at 17:10
1
@jawtheshark Windows 8 and later can natively mount ISOs.
– TheWanderer
Aug 18 '16 at 4:36
1
@Zacharee1 Except of course this is clearly Windows 7.
– jawtheshark
Aug 18 '16 at 6:49
8
8
The iso is what you downloaded... The file you opened which contains the files you screenshotted - that's the iso.
– Tim
Aug 17 '16 at 16:57
The iso is what you downloaded... The file you opened which contains the files you screenshotted - that's the iso.
– Tim
Aug 17 '16 at 16:57
1
1
Tim is totally right. Windows hides file extensions (just in case you didn't know) and it looks like you have some kind op plugin that manages to open them in Windows Explorer.So, give us a screenshot of D:Ubuntu insteadAlso, go enable extensions.
– jawtheshark
Aug 17 '16 at 17:04
Tim is totally right. Windows hides file extensions (just in case you didn't know) and it looks like you have some kind op plugin that manages to open them in Windows Explorer.So, give us a screenshot of D:Ubuntu insteadAlso, go enable extensions.
– jawtheshark
Aug 17 '16 at 17:04
2
2
Your utorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded content upon finishing the download job. And it opens the iso file with Windows Explorer, because the iso file-type is associated to Win Explorer. That's why you see the actual content of the iso file, and not the iso itself. Go one level up in Win Explorer and you will see the iso file.
– ipse lute
Aug 17 '16 at 17:10
Your utorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded content upon finishing the download job. And it opens the iso file with Windows Explorer, because the iso file-type is associated to Win Explorer. That's why you see the actual content of the iso file, and not the iso itself. Go one level up in Win Explorer and you will see the iso file.
– ipse lute
Aug 17 '16 at 17:10
1
1
@jawtheshark Windows 8 and later can natively mount ISOs.
– TheWanderer
Aug 18 '16 at 4:36
@jawtheshark Windows 8 and later can natively mount ISOs.
– TheWanderer
Aug 18 '16 at 4:36
1
1
@Zacharee1 Except of course this is clearly Windows 7.
– jawtheshark
Aug 18 '16 at 6:49
@Zacharee1 Except of course this is clearly Windows 7.
– jawtheshark
Aug 18 '16 at 6:49
|
show 5 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
According to your screenshot you have actually mounted the .iso file and are browsing its contents.
As @ipse-lute correctly pointed out:
[...]Your uTorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded
content (either upon completion or by double-click) with Windows
Explorer, because the ISO file-type is associated to Windows Explorer
by default.[...]
Go one level up in Windows Explorer and you will see the ISO file.
Navigate to D:Ubuntu
and there will be a file named ubuntu-16.04.1-desktop-amd64.iso
. This is the ISO file you downloaded.
My guess is that you have Hide extensions for known file types
ON, thus you cannot see the .iso extension on the file (default behavior on windows).
In order to view file extensions:
- Start Windows Explorer, you can do this by opening up any folder.
- Click Organize.
- Click Folder and search options.
- Click the View tab.
- Scroll down until you find Hide extensions for known file types,
- Un-check it by clicking the check box.
Note To hide file name extensions, check this line. - Click OK
add a comment |
Also beware that Windows 10 will hide a mounted .iso
file while it's mounted. In that case users will want to go to My Computer, eject/unmount the Ubuntu disk, then go back to their Downloads directory and they can find the .iso
file again and use Burn Disk Image
add a comment |
If downloading on Windows, download on chrome, not on edge. Edge will read the iso as a Disk, or even a disk drive instead of a disk burn image. The default location in the dir is in Downloads for edge.
Try using Chrome instead, so it will ask you which dir to put it in
New contributor
add a comment |
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3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
According to your screenshot you have actually mounted the .iso file and are browsing its contents.
As @ipse-lute correctly pointed out:
[...]Your uTorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded
content (either upon completion or by double-click) with Windows
Explorer, because the ISO file-type is associated to Windows Explorer
by default.[...]
Go one level up in Windows Explorer and you will see the ISO file.
Navigate to D:Ubuntu
and there will be a file named ubuntu-16.04.1-desktop-amd64.iso
. This is the ISO file you downloaded.
My guess is that you have Hide extensions for known file types
ON, thus you cannot see the .iso extension on the file (default behavior on windows).
In order to view file extensions:
- Start Windows Explorer, you can do this by opening up any folder.
- Click Organize.
- Click Folder and search options.
- Click the View tab.
- Scroll down until you find Hide extensions for known file types,
- Un-check it by clicking the check box.
Note To hide file name extensions, check this line. - Click OK
add a comment |
According to your screenshot you have actually mounted the .iso file and are browsing its contents.
As @ipse-lute correctly pointed out:
[...]Your uTorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded
content (either upon completion or by double-click) with Windows
Explorer, because the ISO file-type is associated to Windows Explorer
by default.[...]
Go one level up in Windows Explorer and you will see the ISO file.
Navigate to D:Ubuntu
and there will be a file named ubuntu-16.04.1-desktop-amd64.iso
. This is the ISO file you downloaded.
My guess is that you have Hide extensions for known file types
ON, thus you cannot see the .iso extension on the file (default behavior on windows).
In order to view file extensions:
- Start Windows Explorer, you can do this by opening up any folder.
- Click Organize.
- Click Folder and search options.
- Click the View tab.
- Scroll down until you find Hide extensions for known file types,
- Un-check it by clicking the check box.
Note To hide file name extensions, check this line. - Click OK
add a comment |
According to your screenshot you have actually mounted the .iso file and are browsing its contents.
As @ipse-lute correctly pointed out:
[...]Your uTorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded
content (either upon completion or by double-click) with Windows
Explorer, because the ISO file-type is associated to Windows Explorer
by default.[...]
Go one level up in Windows Explorer and you will see the ISO file.
Navigate to D:Ubuntu
and there will be a file named ubuntu-16.04.1-desktop-amd64.iso
. This is the ISO file you downloaded.
My guess is that you have Hide extensions for known file types
ON, thus you cannot see the .iso extension on the file (default behavior on windows).
In order to view file extensions:
- Start Windows Explorer, you can do this by opening up any folder.
- Click Organize.
- Click Folder and search options.
- Click the View tab.
- Scroll down until you find Hide extensions for known file types,
- Un-check it by clicking the check box.
Note To hide file name extensions, check this line. - Click OK
According to your screenshot you have actually mounted the .iso file and are browsing its contents.
As @ipse-lute correctly pointed out:
[...]Your uTorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded
content (either upon completion or by double-click) with Windows
Explorer, because the ISO file-type is associated to Windows Explorer
by default.[...]
Go one level up in Windows Explorer and you will see the ISO file.
Navigate to D:Ubuntu
and there will be a file named ubuntu-16.04.1-desktop-amd64.iso
. This is the ISO file you downloaded.
My guess is that you have Hide extensions for known file types
ON, thus you cannot see the .iso extension on the file (default behavior on windows).
In order to view file extensions:
- Start Windows Explorer, you can do this by opening up any folder.
- Click Organize.
- Click Folder and search options.
- Click the View tab.
- Scroll down until you find Hide extensions for known file types,
- Un-check it by clicking the check box.
Note To hide file name extensions, check this line. - Click OK
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:24
Community♦
1
1
answered Aug 17 '16 at 17:08
Panagiotis TabakisPanagiotis Tabakis
1,227719
1,227719
add a comment |
add a comment |
Also beware that Windows 10 will hide a mounted .iso
file while it's mounted. In that case users will want to go to My Computer, eject/unmount the Ubuntu disk, then go back to their Downloads directory and they can find the .iso
file again and use Burn Disk Image
add a comment |
Also beware that Windows 10 will hide a mounted .iso
file while it's mounted. In that case users will want to go to My Computer, eject/unmount the Ubuntu disk, then go back to their Downloads directory and they can find the .iso
file again and use Burn Disk Image
add a comment |
Also beware that Windows 10 will hide a mounted .iso
file while it's mounted. In that case users will want to go to My Computer, eject/unmount the Ubuntu disk, then go back to their Downloads directory and they can find the .iso
file again and use Burn Disk Image
Also beware that Windows 10 will hide a mounted .iso
file while it's mounted. In that case users will want to go to My Computer, eject/unmount the Ubuntu disk, then go back to their Downloads directory and they can find the .iso
file again and use Burn Disk Image
answered Sep 29 '18 at 4:36
Kristopher IvesKristopher Ives
2,94211525
2,94211525
add a comment |
add a comment |
If downloading on Windows, download on chrome, not on edge. Edge will read the iso as a Disk, or even a disk drive instead of a disk burn image. The default location in the dir is in Downloads for edge.
Try using Chrome instead, so it will ask you which dir to put it in
New contributor
add a comment |
If downloading on Windows, download on chrome, not on edge. Edge will read the iso as a Disk, or even a disk drive instead of a disk burn image. The default location in the dir is in Downloads for edge.
Try using Chrome instead, so it will ask you which dir to put it in
New contributor
add a comment |
If downloading on Windows, download on chrome, not on edge. Edge will read the iso as a Disk, or even a disk drive instead of a disk burn image. The default location in the dir is in Downloads for edge.
Try using Chrome instead, so it will ask you which dir to put it in
New contributor
If downloading on Windows, download on chrome, not on edge. Edge will read the iso as a Disk, or even a disk drive instead of a disk burn image. The default location in the dir is in Downloads for edge.
Try using Chrome instead, so it will ask you which dir to put it in
New contributor
New contributor
answered 2 hours ago
Eric CaceresEric Caceres
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
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8
The iso is what you downloaded... The file you opened which contains the files you screenshotted - that's the iso.
– Tim
Aug 17 '16 at 16:57
1
Tim is totally right. Windows hides file extensions (just in case you didn't know) and it looks like you have some kind op plugin that manages to open them in Windows Explorer.So, give us a screenshot of D:Ubuntu insteadAlso, go enable extensions.
– jawtheshark
Aug 17 '16 at 17:04
2
Your utorrent program is probably set to open the downloaded content upon finishing the download job. And it opens the iso file with Windows Explorer, because the iso file-type is associated to Win Explorer. That's why you see the actual content of the iso file, and not the iso itself. Go one level up in Win Explorer and you will see the iso file.
– ipse lute
Aug 17 '16 at 17:10
1
@jawtheshark Windows 8 and later can natively mount ISOs.
– TheWanderer
Aug 18 '16 at 4:36
1
@Zacharee1 Except of course this is clearly Windows 7.
– jawtheshark
Aug 18 '16 at 6:49