Details: I first started trying to flash to a Wyse 3040 (2gig, 8gig). I used xunbuntu (trial mode) and the first time I tried it worked great and it flashed from the HA url. But I saw that after I did a restore from my existing HA Rpi, that I had little memory left. So I thought I would install to SSD plugged into a usb. I got the above error. So I tried again to install to the internal memory again and got the error. I downloaded the file and used it directly. Nope. Tried unbunu and linux mint live. Nope.

I was able to burn the mint iso on a usb with etcher, buuuuut i have my doubts that it was done correctly. The installer was really slow and when it finished the pc was performing quite poorly. I ended installing bionicpuppy and it goes like a rocket.


Download Etcher For Linux Mint


Download File 🔥 https://urllio.com/2y4B1r 🔥



Now, the root of the problem here is that the Linux Mint folks screwed up their linuxmint-21.2-cinnamon-64bit-edge.iso, because, if you look at its content, you will find that the /efi/boot/bootx64.efi, i.e. the 64-bit UEFI bootloader for x86 systems, is a symbolic link that points to a file that does NOT exist on the ISO (because it points to /etc/alternatives/shimx64.efi.signed which probably existed on the developer's machine but is most certainly not present on the ISO-9660 file system). So, of course, when you create the media using File System Transposition (or ISO mode as Rufus calls it), the 64-bit UEFI bootloader will not work and the media will not boot, even though this has nothing to do with using NTFS.

You might be able to get a bootable media by using DD Mode when Rufus prompts you (Remember when you got a prompt from Rufus asking you whether you wanted to write the image in ISO Mode or DD Mode, and advising you to try DD Mode if you had an issue with ISO Mode?), but the main issue, really, is that the Linux Mint folks borked their linuxmint-21.2-cinnamon-64bit-edge.iso (but curiously, their linuxmint-21.2-xfce-64bit.iso is fine) and I have now reported this to them.

Go to Etcher Homepage page and download the .zip file for the latest version of Etcher for your computer according to your system architecture. (32bit or 64bit). The default download folder is Home->Downloads folder in Linux mint.

Here i am using 32-bit OS and selected the Etcher for Linux x86 32- bit. And the downloaded file is Etcher-1.0.0-rc.3-linux-x86.zip. Right click on the file and select Extract here. After the extract, you will get .AppImage file. That is Etcher-1.0.0-rc.3-linux-x86.AppImage.

dear @Col_Panek and @nevj :

i so appreciate all your help this past summer!

my ducks and/or sheep seemed all in a row, finally, and i was figuring out the ventoy/iso file install to flash drive, when i got into trouble in my linux terminal:

4. Wait for the installation to finish and run Etcher by finding it in the list of your Ubuntu applications. Alternatively, start it by typing balena-etcher-electron in the command line.

In the end I flashed a 16 GB Toshiba MicrSD HC I using etcher, my faith that all will be good, and about 40 hrs of time (Flash Rate 0.1 MB/s as stated by etcher)

This time etcher showed success and the PI powered up and I could proceed with the setup

All right , lets give this a try:

By some reason I lost the micro SD of my CEED.

The CEED is as it was sold thence with a RASPI 3B+

Now I want to use it with the new software version Sirius

(I was not aware of the Pi-Top [1] to [4] until now)

I have brand new 64GB SD cards available and flashed Sirius as of Dec 2020 C781

I noted that using etcher takes a long time, that unpacking the zip file behaves mysteriously slowly. But in the end i was able to flash the sd using dd.

(actually etcher worked out as well, but it told me it would take 2200 minutes to flash.)

I use a laptop running linux mint 20 and the laptop has an sd card port available

If you are just getting started with Linux systems, use the GParted method as described below. If this is not your first time installing a Linux system, you can partition your USB drive during Linux mint installation.

I am not a linux expert but I suppose the article is a bit misleading. The installation is not universal and only works on the specific set of hardware that was present while installing the system. Of course operating systems are tolerable and can automatically figure out changes like RAM, keyboard, mouse etc which would enable them to boot on other set of hardware but definitely not a reliable solution. Live distros are there for a purpose. Otherwise we would always create installations on usb rather than going through the trouble of creating persistence files on live distros.

Can you let us know what you used?

Image, SD-card make and model, etcher software version, OS software version?

I tried to reproduce issue with the image downloaded from: -pi-raspios32-v1.6.2.img.xz

Installing with etcher 1.5.100 on Linux Mint 20 with a generic 8 GB SD, which went just fine.

This results in me getting put in grub rescue mode. I have attempted to fix this in Linux mint live but I am still stuck. Any help would be appreciated.

I installed PVE 6.2-1 using Rufus and etcher with 2 different USB drives and I still get this error. e24fc04721

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