Unetbootin For Maceverye



I have one question... Windows7? If you have windows 7 I'd just do a hdd install on another computer and swap back.
If you do this I'd note the following:
1) Make sure it's a 32bit computer with similar part.
2) Have either Vista or Win7 already installed
- copy your cd key for backup
3) Back up every personal file on the computer, unless nothing is worth it.
Why all that? Well really as long as you load a generic kernel with all the generic modules loading you shouldn't have any hardware problems as long as it's x86 based, or is it 386? Something like that. As far as Vista/Win7? Both of those use the same install methods, basically you copy all the files, reboot, THEN it installs (well configures) everything. It's not like WindowsX where you had to have the drivers loaded for it to install right. They just have a single install image (install.wim?) and that has every driver ect for it to run. That's how we get the WinPE tech running, because really it's all there. Basically you can swap hdd's with win7/vista to almost any computer and it will boot just fine. People have argued me with this, and I know it's not reccomended but I do it all the time. I never re-install windows when I upgrade stuff, and I went from a AMD64 (semperon) to a phenom II x2. So I'd really suggest swap if you want, it'd save you a shit tone of hastle if you want it as a partition.
Unetbootin

Unetbootin For Mac Every Command

UNetbootin allows users to install Linux or create bootable liveUSB drives without a CD. UNetbootin has built-in support for numerous distributions, including Ubuntu, Fedora, openSUSE, PCLinuxOS. How to Install Linux Mint (with Pictures)1. Boot into Linux Mint. Depending on how you installed Linux Mint, you may be given the option to select it from a list of installed operating systems,.

Mac

Unetbootin For Mac Every Mac

Did you download the version of unetbootin for a Mac?
Did you then start unetbootin and go to the Debian iso you have?
Did you follow all the steps shown on the unetbootin site?
When unetbootin finished and indicated that it was completed, did you then reboot and set boot priority to the usb drive?
Is this when you got the black screen?
There is an option to do a 'frugal install' which simply means putting the Live CD of Debian on a partition of your hard drive. It puts an entry in the system bootloader so you can then see a unetbootin option and that would boot the Debian Live CD so that you could begin the installation to a separate partition. You need to be careful if you use this method so you don't overwrite any part of your currently installed system. I've never used a Mac so I have no idea if any of this will work. See the link below. Never used it myself so can't add any detail.
http://sourceforge.net/p/unetbootin/wiki/installmodes/
If you use unetbootin to create a bootable flash drive and you have problems, you might try it on another PC to see if the flash drive boots.