I've got a friend who wants to try Ubuntu on his netbook, but doesn't have a USB drive he can use, and of course the netbook doesn't have a CD drive. Is it possible for him to install Ubuntu?
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Yep, all your friend needs to do is download and install Wubi. It's designed for this exact scenario. You can check it out here: http://wubi-installer.org/ |
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If you have a USB Flash drive of 1GB or more you can use the following method. What You Will Need
The Process
If you wish to create a flash drive that is persistent (I.E. You can save stuff to it like files and settings etc...) might I suggest that you take a look at the following question and it's subsequent answers? Method to create a live USB disk (with persistence) which _actually_ works? Hopes this helps you out!!! |
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The Ubuntu Help Wiki has a section on Installation Without a CD with sections like from USB, Windows, Linux, VM, etc. |
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I haven't tried this so I don't know how easy it is, or if it would work with a netbook, but you could try a Netboot install. |
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https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation That should cover what you need to know. :) |
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Yes, you can use a usb memory stick instead of a cd, follow the instructions at http://www.ubuntu.com/download/ubuntu/download |
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You have to use alternative cd
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If he has no USB disk, maybe he has an SD card? (E.g. normally used for a digital camera or mobile phone or such.) |
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UNetbootin allows you to create bootable Live USB drives for Ubuntu, Fedora, and other Linux distributions without burning a CD. It runs on Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X. You can either let UNetbootin download one of the many distributions supported out-of-the-box for you, or supply your own Linux .iso file if you've already downloaded one or your preferred distribution isn't on the list. UNetbootin can make a "frugal install" on your local hard disk if you don't have a USB drive. For the Hard-Disk/ "frugal install" mode, UNetbootin uses a Linux-based installer to install a small modification to the bootloader to boot the desired distribution's installer or to load the system utility, no CD required. After the distribution has been installed, or once done using the system utility, the modification to the bootloader is then undone. You can use the following link to run the "frugal/hard-disk install": http://sourceforge.net/apps/trac/unetbootin/wiki/installmodes |
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He can download and install wubi which doesn't require a usb or cd key. Here is a link. Here is also another link on the various way ubuntu can be installed. |
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He could setup a liveCD iso for PXE boot, or use one that is available on the net - see |
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You could use Unetbootin and set it to use the hard drive. |
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Wubi will allow you to install Ubuntu while keeping Windows installed. If at anytime he decides he does not like Ubuntu he can uninstall it just like a normal program and it will give him his space back. If he does any other install it will be much harder to uninstall. He'll have to use the Disk Management tool and delete the partition and then extend the Windows partition. In order to get Wubi you can download it at http://wubi-installer.org/ or download the current Ubuntu release and then use 7-Zip to extract the ISO and then click on wubi.exe. An installer should appear and he can follow the instructions from there. It's very simple for even the most non-tech users. |
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I once installed an Ubuntu derivative(Samurai) using Virtualbox to mount my harddisk raw partition as a virtualbox hard drive. It involves creating a vmdk file which is linked to the partition. Then anything you do on the virtualbox goes to the partition. Even the grub install worked. However, this method is quite risky as it involves giving raw access to Virtualbox. Further you can,quite simply try to boot into Windows twice (the second time inside your VirtualBox), so it is not recommended. But it is always an option to install it, and just delete the Virtual Machine. However your boot structure, partition should still retain your brand new Ubuntu install. Here's the link I used : Accessing Physical Disks on Virtualbox |
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