just use dd or Popsicle (popsicle has a native gtk gui) or Ventoy
I stopped using programs like etcher for flashing iso's after i found out you can just run
cp /path/to/your/file/example.iso /dev/[insert device here]
For example
sudo cp ./Downloads/archlinux-2023-09-01.iso /dev/sdb
I love it because it just works on any linux machine, always. Of course, this is maybe not fit for your usecase.
You can also use dd, tee or even echo, the archwiki has a good section on flashing iso's.
I always love the many little implications of this genius "everything is a file"-architecture. Thank you Ken Thompson.
If you have the iso image, you can write it with the command dd to your stick / sdcard
does Ventoy work for your use case ? write the ventoy image onto the usb, then you can copy/paste .iso files onto it without formatting. real neat for booting different systems from a single usb
just use dd or Popsicle (popsicle has a native gtk gui) or Ventoy
I stopped using programs like etcher for flashing iso's after i found out you can just run
cp /path/to/your/file/example.iso /dev/[insert device here]
For example
sudo cp ./Downloads/archlinux-2023-09-01.iso /dev/sdb
I love it because it just works on any linux machine, always. Of course, this is maybe not fit for your usecase.
You can also use dd, tee or even echo, the archwiki has a good section on flashing iso's.
I always love the many little implications of this genius "everything is a file"-architecture. Thank you Ken Thompson.
If you have the iso image, you can write it with the command dd to your stick / sdcard
does Ventoy work for your use case ? write the ventoy image onto the usb, then you can copy/paste .iso files onto it without formatting. real neat for booting different systems from a single usb