If you get a permission denied error click the Permissions button on the woe-usb screen in Ubuntu Software and toggle the permissions options from OFF to ON as shown in the below screenshot. To launch the woe-usb snap package command line tool run the following command: /snap/bin/woe-usb.woeusb Sudo snap connect woe-usb:removable-media To install the WoeUSB command line tool snap package in all currently supported versions of Ubuntu open the terminal and type: sudo snap install -edge woe-usb WoeUSB supports both UEFI and BIOS for FAT32/NTFS/ExFAT USB flash drives. This will install the WoeUSB graphical interface and the WoeUSB command line tool. To install WoeUSB (GUI+CLI) in Ubuntu 14.04/16.04/17.10-20.04: sudo add-apt-repository ppa:nilarimogard/webupd8 NTFS filesystem support has been added to WoeUSB 3.0.0 and later. Some third-party installers feature Windows installation images ( /sources/install.wim) greater than 4GB making FAT32 as target filesystem impossible. WoeUSB is an updated fork of the WinUSB project. Native UEFI booting is supported for Windows 7 and later images (limited to the FAT filesystem as the target device). If your computer detects obsolete boot information on the USB flash drive, it may try to boot an operating system that no longer exists on the USB flash drive, and then UNetbootin will get stuck in a repeating countdown. This wouldn't solve your problem because you are trying to boot Windows 7, so I suggest that you use the WoeUSB application to make the bootable Windows 7 USB flash drive.įirst reformat the USB drive as FAT32 to remove whatever obsolete boot information UNetbootin wrote on the USB flash drive. Startup Disk Creator is capable of making both Ubuntu and non-*buntu bootable live USBs. I know that it's a problem with UNetbootin because I have seen it before, and managed to solve it by reformatting the USB flash drive to remove to bootloader and then making the live USB again with Startup Disk Creator. If the UNetbootin boot menu does not have an entry for the OS you are trying to boot to under the Default boot menu entry, this is another sign that UNetbootin is not working properly. The "Automatic boot in 10 seconds." countdown loop is a UNetbootin problem.
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