I am using Rosa Image Writer to write ISO images to USB Sticks. The website says that it needs sudoer rights and that kdesu is supported. However on newer Kubuntu versions, kdesu is not available anymore.

The ROSA distribution comes in the form of ISO image file which is supposed to be burned onto DVD for booting from it. However, if your computer does not have an optical drive, you can use flash disk for the same purpose. ImageWriter allows you to write the ISO image to the USB stick.


Download Rosa Image Writer


Download šŸ”„ https://urlin.us/2y2M9e šŸ”„



The ROSA images are hybrid. That means, they contain ISO image headers, as well as partition table with boot record which are used for hard disks and flash sticks. Thus, all the dirty work has been performed when building image, and ImageWriter only needs to write it down to the flash disk bit-by-bit.

In Linux you can achieve the same result using the standard command line tool named dd. However, using this tool demands some skills and much caution to avoid overwriting the wrong disk. Besides, the operating system often uses write caching and reports writing as finished long before the data are really written, and you have to use the sync command to ensure completion. ImageWriter provides graphical interface for easy selecting the source image file and target device, it displays the progress of writing, and ensures correct synchronization of data.

We are often asked whether ImageWriter can be used for writing anything besides ROSA. Unfortunately, that depends on the distribution. If its developer recommends you to write its image to flash disk using dd or another similar tool which performs bit-by-bit copying, then yes, ImageWriter can be used to do the same. If more advanced tools are required, which repartition the flash disk, format it, copy the data as set of files, etc., then no, ImageWriter will not be able to help you.

To prepare a bootable drive in graphical mode, we recommend to use ROSA Image Writer. If you are running ROSA Dekstop you can simply install the rosa-imagewriter package from its repositories. For other systems the program is available by the following links:

In the upper field select the image file by clicking the open file button; in Linux you may simply drag and drop the iso file from file manager into the application window. In the drop-down box at the bottom of the window select the device where the image should be written to. To write the image, press the Write button in the lower right corner.

Rosa Image Writer is a software application designed to create bootable USB flash drives with the ROSA Linux installer by dumping the ISO image file content onto the drive. It may also work with other Linux distributions or non-Linux distributions, but there is no guarantee of success.

Live images are ideal for people who want a clean installation. Use a live image to replace your existing system, install alongside existing operating systems, or simply try KDE neon without affecting their computer.

demmĀ 

i tried downloading the isowriter for linux but couldnt figure out how to run it, all i got was a bunch of files when i extracted it, so i tried suse studio image writer for windows, but it only uses .raw files, and my kaos is an .iso file , so it wouldnt even work , then i tried rosa image writer , but when installing i get this messageĀ 


Imagewriter won't work until you compile it or install a precompiled package. The best way for you is to use dd to write the ISO to the usb. Learn how to do it here: -to-copy-an-iso-image-onto-usb-with-dd#351815

do you know where can i get a precompiled package of it to where i can just open and run it ?are there any easy graphical ways of installing kaos good ?i tried the windows writers opensuse writer and rosa, but they didnt work and rosa writer gave me this error on all 3 of my usb sticks![ _Canvas.png][1]

and suse witer uses .raw but my kaos is .iso files, and i didnt understand anything i read in the link you showed me , i dont really know much about command lines and stuff like that

Since you have OpenSuse installed, why not use that to create media, if none of the instructions are clear enough for you? Imagewriter is a tool created by OpenSuse, so they have it in their repos, probably in their default installs too.

demm actually fjmorzan solved all of my problems,in the end all i had to do was use suse windows writer, rename the iso to .raw, thats the most easiest way to do it, i was running around trying different methods and doing so much to get it to work, and the docs mentioned nothing of having to rename .iso to .raw whilst using susewriter in windows.i got kaos up and running now,it looks really good, and i was liking it becuase its a rolling release kde focused distro s,omething brand new,and i was ready to make it my main os, but unfortunatly its not just for me becuase very recently I discovered that you can only stricly use 64bit code, no 32bit software, and i need wine ,skype,playonlinux and stuff like that to have my complete linux setup, i am so upset because i know that i am gonna have to get rid of it and go back to the 'buntu distros.

This is the method I usually use when installing from an image personally or when doing installs for others.


That failed as installing or booting a live instance of libreelec would not progress beyond a certain point via Ventoy.

Thank you very much for the hint.Ā 

Did believe that I have to return to Windows to actually burn this image.Ā 


They should officially point out on their download page, that the image could be written with every generic USB creator on LINUX.

I've reset the lock slider (locked and unlocked a couple of times), removed and re-connected my card reader on 2 different USB ports (not on a hub). I have full access to the card and have formatted, read and written to it after each change to confirm that's not an issue. I've tried a couple of images from and get the "Access denied error 5" each time. The only thing I've not been able to test is with a different memory card.

Hi, Don't know if you're still having this problem but I found that my music player (MusicBee, but I would assume others such as winamp and Foobar2000 will do the same) had locked my card as it wanted to sync music to it. I stopped it from trying and the image wrote fine.

I've had this problem. I now have about 5 SD cards that I use with my RPi, none allow me to read using win32 disk imager. I've tried running as administrator, even running in safe mode. Doesn't work. I then tried a new card, straight out of the packaging. This worked fine, no error 5. However, I then wrote Raspbian onto the SD and installed it in the Pi. Later, I then tried reading it again - and then I got Error 5 again....

> Question #205161 on Image Writer changed:

> -image-writer/+question/205161

>

> Haihong (Mr.)Luo posted a new comment:

> Just some points missed out during my previous submit:

> (Point 3. more:) Even if it's detected as hard disk (via SATA converter),

> if there is no letter assigned, Windows 7 seems to refrain from touching

> the NTFS partitions. Maybe an easy way to simulate is just to use a

> USB2->2.5" notebook SATA drive, but the content in the SATA drive has a

> windows 7 on it. Try to backup/read and restore/write on a different

> PC/desktop, using Win Imager32.

>

> --

> You received this question notification because you are a direct

> subscriber of the question.

>

I formated the USB memory stick and the format application informed me that the USB stick was used by another application and if I wanted to continue. I confirmed to continue and once the formating was complete I tried again using the Disk imager and it worked. That is how it worked for me with Error 5!

There is one easy way around this.

1. Format the USB/Media device using the windows format tool in explorer.

2. Then copy the image to the media.

If any processes are using the partition the format tool will close them after prompting.

I had to use CMD and DISKPART to format the drive, after which I was able to write the image to the HDD. You just need to follow the CMD steps in this video =hmKKKfBYsmU Basically I made my external HDD bootable.

This is highly likely a 'Dell' thing as in hardware or BIOS related. For me Centaurus KDE boots from a USB on my Dell OptiPlex but not on the Vostro whereas Gemini boots fine on both machines. No matter if I use balenaEtcher, Rosa image writer or the Kanotix tool the results are the same. Maybe your Lenovo has the same attributes.

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I always use the "Disks" utility that comes with Solus. Just use the "Restore Disk Image" option in the right menu, choose the image file and put the USB stick as the destination. Works every time.

KDE neon is a set of repositories via which software from the KDE community is distributed. It is also a set of disk images which contain easily installable versions of Ubuntu with a minimal set of apps and a KDE Plasma desktop, as well as a preconfigured KDE neon repository of your choice.

Once you have the image, you have two options: write it to USB with KDE/ROSA Image Writer, or burn the image to a DVD.For burning the image to a DVD, use your favorite DVD burner. If you don't have an optical drive or find it too slow, download ROSA image writer and write it to a USB flash drive.Then reboot your system.

Will 'burn' an image to a USB-Key. Following the links from this posts viewtopic.php?p=21506#p21506 and the one below it will lead to applications which can be used under Window, Macs, and other operating systems, including Grey's pet for Fossapup64 and (untested) perhaps other 64-Bit Puppies. Thanks, again, Grey.

EasyDD, Etcher and Rufus (the latter of which can only be used in Windows) will write a prepared, complete disk image, with boot, OS, home and swap partitions (if present) as per the original image file. The prepared image can be a LIVE ISO or a disk image (.img file) of a complete system (see below). ff782bc1db

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