Tip2: If you want "persistence" for a particular Operating System (OS) on this USB stick, then after putting an operating system on the stick, click the operating system you want "persistence" on to highlight it, then click the MultiSystem menu options, and select "persistence", and follow the simple instructions. Tip1: You must format the USB stick with the "fat32" format, and give it a volume name, before using this program not just the default "USB STICK" that the Mint USB Stick Formatter shows, that is not a volume name, so change it to something else. To install, open a console terminal, type in, or copy & paste, each line below one by one: All you need is an Internet connection(at the time of MultiSystem installation only), and a sufficient size of a USB drive depending upon the number of distributions you want to include in that USB drive. Using this utility, we can create any number of bootable Linux distributions in a USB drive. For those who don’t know, "MultiSystem" is a small, Open Source freeware to create a multiboot usb drives from Linux systems. "Startup Disk Creator" is another that is available in the Software Manager or Synaptic Package Manager (SPM). Code: Select all sudo apt-get install unetbootin
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