Is this a reasonable thing to want to do? I've tried using Balena Etcher, but it tells me that the .iso file is not bootable and indeed after I've copied it to the usb stick and tried to boot from it, it was not recognised as bootable. I've also tried to format the usb stick...
While Easy Recovery Essentials for Windows is often created and used as a recovery CD by following our guides on creating a bootable CD, it can also be readily converted to a bootable USB stick for use in PCs that don't have CD drives or when a CD or DVD
3. Navigate to the Advanced -> USB Configuration -> USB controller setup screen, and configure the controller for USB 2.0 (high speed) mode. 4. Navigate to the Boot -> Hard Disk setup screen, and make your USB flash drive the first boot device. The USB flash drive must be the first ...
To use the PXE emulation USB key, insert the USB key into the drive and restart the target. If your machine does not boot from the USB key, check the BIOS boot list to see if your USB drive is included in the boot sequence and is listed before the hard disk. ...
Run diskpart.exe and then set your drive and partition to point to the stick. Make sure you set the partition as Active. Do this by:- list volume (to determine the volume number for your drive, in my case 2) Select volume 2 active Create Boot Sector There's a tool in Vista called...
I also assume you have verified that the PC can boot from a USB port. Most of the newer machines can do this. Having exhausted the easy way and if you don't want to spend any money, I suppose you could first install Windows 8.1 on your Mac. This would allow you to create the ...
Hold down the option key at bootup. Do you see your USB flash disk an something to boot off of? If so, you can select it to boot off of it. (You can also hold down Command-V while doing so to boot in verbose mode; it should give you white text on a black background, loggi...
etc disk and use usb to boot into that maybe :) From my point of view UEFI not rly awesome and not so practical like legacy systems but at least standard... And I still don't know how a GRUB loader would run on fat 32... surface would be better with at least some legacy support...
When it were true that a different USB stick was needed for different Bios, then the Windows Installation media could never boot on all Bios versions. But it can. Maybe you formatted the USB stick with NTFS? On the page you linked: 展開表格 Important If your server platform supports Uni...
never recognized as bootable (yes, the BIOS is set to first boot to the USB). I used kubuntu's startup disk creator to put kubuntu 10.10 on this same USB key and it worked correctly, so I don't think it is the USB key.