A few replies.
You don't need to format the USB before converting it into an installation medium. The iso file is an image of n optical disk and it's dumped onto the usb stick regardless of how it's formatted. The result is that the usb now has the ISO 9660 format and to your computer it looks like an external DVD.
Mint generally has the same things available as Ubuntu — it's been described as "Ubuntu done properly". The chief exceptions are that Mint removes anything that it considers spy-ware or a po...
A few replies.You don't need to format the USB before converting it into an installation medium. The iso file is an image of n optical disk and it's dumped onto the usb stick regardless of how it's formatted. The result is that the usb now has the ISO 9660 format and to your computer it looks like an external DVD.
Mint generally has the same things available as Ubuntu — it's been described as "Ubuntu done properly". The chief exceptions are that Mint removes anything that it considers spy-ware or a po...
You don't need to format the USB before converting it into an installation medium. The iso file is an image of n optical disk and it's dumped onto the usb stick regardless of how it's formatted. The result is that the usb now has the ISO 9660 format and to your computer it looks like an external DVD.
Mint generally has the same things available as Ubuntu — it's been described as "Ubuntu done properly". The chief exceptions are that Mint removes anything that it considers spy-ware or a po...