I have tried 12.04 and 13.04 and neither one creates a bootable disk. I already have 64 bit Ubuntu but need 32 bit for a specific program that I need to run. I have tried Startup Disk Creator on Ubuntu, and tried several methods on OS X but none of them create a disl that will show in the boot options. I tried Penguintosh and that got it to show up and it booted as far as the starting kernel message but then it hung there for hours. I have tried redownloading, and as I said multiple methods of creating the boot disk. I've been trying to make this live usb for almost a week now lol. I don't have CD's. Any suggestions?
-
It's not actually an app, it's a command line script calle Juopunut. It specifically requires 32 bit. I finally bought a DVD off of a friend and created a live DVD. It installs and tell me to reboot but when my computer comes back up, refind can't find any bootable partitions...– rassawyerJul 10, 2013 at 1:43
-
This question sounds similar, and may help: askubuntu.com/questions/433949/…– pauldooMar 15, 2014 at 17:14
Add a comment
|
1 Answer
The 32 bit image is for bios based PCs only. You can install 32 bit apps on a 64 bit system.