  | | | Subject: Re: ubs mem stick install | Subject: Re: ubs mem stick install 2007-09-07 - By Fred Grant
Back On Fri, 2007-09-07 at 13:43 -0700, Rick Stevens wrote:
> > > > > > > > > > > > > > I keep reading about linux ubs systems. > > > > > > > > > > > > Do you mean USB? (Dyslexics Untie!) > > > > > > > > > > > > > Is it possible to install > > > > > > > Fedora from one of these? > > > > > > > > > > > > I think so, if the box will boot from a USB device. I think the more > > > > > > recent boxes do. > > > > > > > > > > > > > I don't have a dvd and am reluctant to buy > > > > > > > one just to upgrade to FC-7. > > > > > > > > > > > > The other alternative is to download the DVD ISO to a hard drive, > > > > > > internal or USB drive, then boot from the F7 rescue CD to install. I > > > > > > think that will work. Not tried. I'm still migrating to FC6. > > > > > > > > > > There's also an "F7 Live CD" you can download, burn and boot. It will > > > > > run all by itself or you can do a network install from it using public > > > > > servers. > > > > > > > > > I have access to cable Internet at my son's on a Windows PC. Could I > > > > burn the live CD and then install to a usb device that I could bring > > > > home and use on my system? If so, how would you suggest going about it? > > > > > > The live CD is designed to be burned to a CD as it's an ISO file (CD > > > ROM image file). I suggested it as you said you didn't have a DVD > > > but I assumed you may have had a CD drive. The nice thing about the > > > live CD is that you can "try it first" and install to hard drive if > > > you like it. > > > > > > If you want to install and bypass the "try it first" stuff, you can do > > > a network install using a USB thumbdrive. Download the "diskboot.img" > > > file from one of the mirrors and copy that to your thumbdrive using > > > "dd" or (under DOS/Windows), "rawrite". You can boot the thumbdrive and > > > do a network install. > > > > > > Have a look at this page: > > > > > > http://docs.fedoraproject.org/install-guide/f7/en_US/sn-which-files.html > > > > > > Try to figure out what you want to do and we'll do what we can to help. > > > > > > think it'd work, however. I can give it a try. > > > > > > Here are my bios usb options:FDD,HDD,ZIP,CDROM. Do you think I could > > boot from usb? > > A thumb drive will appear as an HDD, so if those are the options under > USB boot devices, yes. You do have some work to do: > > 1. Download the "diskboot.img" file from one of the repositories > > 2. Use some program to copy the image file to the thumb drive. Under > DOS or Windows, find a copy of "rawrite" and use it. Under Linux, use > "dd", e.g.: > > dd if=/path/to/diskboot.img of=/dev/sda bs=512 > > That assumes that the thumb drive showed up as /dev/sda. Use the > "dmesg" command to display where the kernel actually found it. > > 3. Plug the thumb drive into the target machine. > > 4. Reboot the target machine. If the system already has a bootable OS on > the hard drive, change the boot order in the BIOS screen to boot the > USB drive first. If there is no bootable OS on the hard drive, you > can skip this step. > > 5. Follow the prompts at the boot screen you see. > > Again, for about $40 you can get an external USB DVD/RW drive. They're > REALLY handy to have around.
I think you're trying to tell me something here. > -- Fred
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