Install and Boot UBCD from a USB Thumbdrive
-
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:29 pm
Install and Boot UBCD from a USB Thumbdrive
In this simplified USB Ultimate Boot CD walkthrough tutorial, we will demonstrate How To create a USB bootable Ultimate Boot CD (UBCD) using a Windows host PC to create the USB UBCD. Ultimate Boot CD is an awesome PC diagnostics tool that condenses over 100 useful PC diagnostics and hardware troubleshooting tools into a single easy to use interface.
USB Ultimate Boot CD (UBCD) prerequisites:
* UBCDfix2.exe (does the USB conversion)
* UBCD ISO
* USB flash drive
* A windows host PC to perform the build
Simple USB Ultimate Boot CD How-To:
1. Download and launch UBCDfix2.exe, a UBCD folder is created.
2. Download the UBCD ISO and move to your UBCD folder
3. From the UBCD folder, click fixubcd2.bat and follow the onscreen instructions
4. Reboot and set your computer to Boot from the USB device
5. On next launch, you should be booting Ultimate Boot CD from your USB stick
Update 05/19/08: The script now moves the extracted files to the flash drive automatically. It has been tested to work in both XP and Vista.
USB Ultimate Boot CD (UBCD) prerequisites:
* UBCDfix2.exe (does the USB conversion)
* UBCD ISO
* USB flash drive
* A windows host PC to perform the build
Simple USB Ultimate Boot CD How-To:
1. Download and launch UBCDfix2.exe, a UBCD folder is created.
2. Download the UBCD ISO and move to your UBCD folder
3. From the UBCD folder, click fixubcd2.bat and follow the onscreen instructions
4. Reboot and set your computer to Boot from the USB device
5. On next launch, you should be booting Ultimate Boot CD from your USB stick
Update 05/19/08: The script now moves the extracted files to the flash drive automatically. It has been tested to work in both XP and Vista.
not cool
Dude, please don't copy and paste blog articles here, especially without even attributing the source as you did. Just link to the source.
http://www.pendrivelinux.com/2006/03/25 ... sb-device/
http://www.pendrivelinux.com/2006/03/25 ... sb-device/
-
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:29 pm
Sorry. I did consider that you weren't male, but I thought that usage of "dude" to be not completely necessarily gender-specific (I've had friends that used it all the time for either sex, but probably that was just them). But I'm sure that most of the world doesn't see the word that way, and I like to think I'm more sensitive to such biases
And yeah, I guess it's not the copying-and-pasting, but appearing to claim someone else's work (words) as your own that bothers me.
Regards,
ashghost
And yeah, I guess it's not the copying-and-pasting, but appearing to claim someone else's work (words) as your own that bothers me.
Regards,
ashghost
-
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:29 pm
I was not attempting to copy the work of another. I was simply trying to share the knowledge with those who browse these forums. I had not thought about citing my source, purely because I have been awake for quite some time. I am working on a new layout for the computers at the local high school, as I am the Technology Director.
I did not mean to sound offended, I was just letting you know that I am not a male. I do understand that most females do not have an issue with being called a dude but in my eyes, dude is somewhat of a derogatory term. Refer to the Wikipedia entry on "Dude"
I did not mean to sound offended, I was just letting you know that I am not a male. I do understand that most females do not have an issue with being called a dude but in my eyes, dude is somewhat of a derogatory term. Refer to the Wikipedia entry on "Dude"
-
- Posts: 50
- Joined: Sun Feb 25, 2007 12:12 pm
- Location: Uganda
-
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:29 pm
One note of warning: Using a USB Flash Drive is not recommend for this project. USB Flash Drives have a limited lifespan and installing an OS to one will shorten the life of the device.
Writing to flash memory causes it to degrade ever so slightly. Reading does not. The more you write to a flash device the shorter its lifespan will be. I would recommend using an External Hard Drive.
Writing to flash memory causes it to degrade ever so slightly. Reading does not. The more you write to a flash device the shorter its lifespan will be. I would recommend using an External Hard Drive.
That is certainly correct for most OS installs (except for Puppy Linux or special "persistent" installs like the new Fedora USB installer and Ubuntu's "casper" option), I don't think that applies in this case. This seems to merely copy the iso of a read-only boot disc to the drive and make it bootable, so wouldn't it be read-only?
PenDriveLinux.com has at least one tutorial that includes a warning similar to that (an otherwise-normal Ubuntu install to a USB hard drive), but in this tutorial they even recommend a flash drive.
PenDriveLinux.com has at least one tutorial that includes a warning similar to that (an otherwise-normal Ubuntu install to a USB hard drive), but in this tutorial they even recommend a flash drive.
-
- Posts: 77
- Joined: Mon Mar 03, 2008 6:29 pm
UBCD is not meant to be changed. You use it to boot from so that diagnostics and security scans can be performed in the event that the computer becomes un-bootable. Of you'd have to update the definitions of the programs each time, but it is still useful. Also, I posted a tutorial on how to make Fedora bootable from a USB drive.