No need to burn the install image to a USB drive - Virtualbox mounts ISO images 
from the local
disk just fine. Simply start VB, create a new VM, attach the ISO install image 
to the VM's
"optical drive", and boot the VM. That will then look just like booting a real 
hardware PC with
an install CD or DVD in a physical optical drive, except it's all virtual.

Kind regards,

Helmut.

On 03/11/2019 18:50, Davin Pearson wrote:
> I tried to install Oracle VM VirtualBox but there appears to be no shell 
> prompt so I
> am stuck with nothing to do but to try and installing from an ISO image of 
> Ubuntu
> burnt to a USB stick.  When I googled for burning an iso image it came up with
> a list of proprietary software that I could use to do this, but there must be 
> a better
> way that this!
> 
> This week I will visit Global P.C's for some help with burning an ISO image
> onto a T-Stick.  Hopefully they will charge me zero dollars or a nominal fee
> for the service.
> 
> On Wed, 30 Oct 2019 at 20:49, Helmut Walle <[email protected]
> <mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
> 
>     Have you considered just leaving the Windows system and partitioning as 
> is, and setting up a
>     Linux VM running on VirtualBox, for example? Depending on the kind of 
> diagnostics that you need
>     to run, that could possibly do the job, too, but would have the advantage 
> of being able to run
>     both OSs at the same time, rather than having to select at boot time.
> 
>     That approach, however, may have some limitations when connecting to 
> external hardware. That
>     being said, USB support for VirtualBox is pretty good these days.
> 
>     The effort to set it up is not significantly different from changing 
> partitioning, installing a
>     second OS, and keeping the boot loader intact. It's a really low-risk way 
> of spinning up another
>     OS quickly.
> 
>     Kind regards,
> 
>     Helmut.
> 
>     On 31/10/2019 03:15, Davin Pearson wrote:
>     > I need to resize the primary partition on my new laptop computer's 
> Windows 512 GB solid-state
>     > hard drive but I forget how to do it.
>     >
>     > Any helpful advice would be gratefully appreciated
>     >
>     > I intend to install a dual boot system on my laptop computer. 
>     > That way I can run diagnostic programs on both GNU/Linux
>     > and M.S. Windows.
> 
> -- 
> Sincerely and kindest regards, Davin.
> Davin Pearson    http://davin.50webs.com
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Linux-users mailing list
> [email protected]
> http://lists.canterbury.ac.nz/mailman/listinfo/linux-users
> 

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