Hi Milton, With that command, it brings up the program, and I can select the USB drive in question, but the only options are other..., which seems to be for adding more file types, and the other option is to close. I don't find an option for file name to write to, or a browse to where I want to put it. Thanks. Glenn ----- Original Message ----- From: "Milton" <[email protected]> To: "Glenn / Lenny" <[email protected]>; <[email protected]> Sent: Saturday, August 06, 2016 1:43 PM Subject: Re: {Spam?} making an ISO image
Hi, Maybe this will be of help: in Ubuntu 16.04 I type in a terminal after the flash drive is inserted: usb-creator-gtk Milton Op 06-08-16 om 19:01 schreef Glenn / Lenny: > Hi, > I have been trying several different programs including the DD command, > and either the program seems inaccessible with Orca, or I was not able > to place my image to be, into another drive. > I am running Ubuntu from a live version on an 8GB card. > I have a bootable USB 16GB thumb drive that I want to make into an ISO > image on /dev/sda2. > /dev/sda2 is where my old Ubuntu lives, and I cannot boot to, as grub > got messed up, and I just fixed the MBR so I could at least boot into > Windows on that system. > On a side note, I tried fixing GRUB with no luck, so I will just get a > larger drive and reinstall everything, and copy out files from that > drive when I replace it. > In the meantime, if I do get GRUB working again, this making an ISO > image would be easier, because in one program I was using, it would only > allow me to make an ISO of the USB drive into a directory of this live > boot disk, which is only 8GB. > The boot disk I am wanting to make a copy of is /dev/sdb > So with DD, I tried: > sudo dd if=/dev/sdb of=/dev/sda2/home/Downloads > And I even tried it directly into /dev/sda2 > and I tried all commands with giving the ISO a file name at the end, > like /dev/sda2/usb-image.iso > I tried it with acetoneiso and it gave me the same errors as DD did. > I tried k3b and genisoimage, and a couple others. > I would even write it to a folder on /sda1 if possible, which is an NTFS > partition. > > Thanks for any ideas. > Glenn > > -- Ubuntu-accessibility mailing list [email protected] https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-accessibility
