
If you wanted a persistence install which allows you to save files, settings and installed programs you’ll have to do a little manual work as it currently doesn’t support that option.


Select the USB Drive at the bottom and hit ok and it’ll install a bootloader, the system and you’ll be up and running in no time. Alternatively you can pick an Diskimage and browse for the ISO file you download (and would usually burn to a CD/DVD) and install from that. To install a distro it’s pretty simple, either select it from the “Distribution” option and pick a distribution and version, UNetbootin will then actually download it and install it for you. Ubuntu/LinuxMint/Debian: sudo apt-get install unetbootinįedora/OpenSuse: sudo yum install unetbootin Create a live USB: If you’re using linux it should be found in the usual place you can install things. The best way I have found to get around this issue is to install and run unetbootin to create live USBs. It seems to be a bug that’s effecting users running Karmic, Lucid, Maverick and Natty so it’s a pretty wide spread issue.

This is actually a bug with the software and isn’t anything you’ve done wrong. init: line 1: can't open /dev/sr0: No medium found After installing Ubuntu on a USB stick with the Ubuntu USB Startup Disk Creator (usb-creator-gtk) you might encounter an error such as the following: stdin: I/O error
