On 10-07-10 11:00 PM, H.S. wrote: > On 10/07/10 10:50 PM, Kevin Fenzi wrote: >> >> I would expect the dd to work fine. Does your bios have a choice of >> booting from usb-cdrom and usb-hd? Have you tried both settings? > > Just yesterday I installed Debian from its netinstall image. I just > dd'ed it my USB stick and then booted the computer with the USB stick > plugged in. The computer picked the OS (but there was no other OS on the > computer's hard disk at them, of course). I am expecting the same thing > to happen now as well. In fact, it does, since if I use the Debian USB > stick, I get the computer to boot from that (a "removabel device" is the > first boot device), so the problem lies with the Fedora USB stick somewhere. > I downloaded Fedora 13's Live iso image and burned it on another USB stick. That also failed to boot my computer (or my computer did not see it). I then tried that USB stick on another computer, but that computer booted off the stick as expected! So it my own computer that was at fault (at least in Live USB stick's case). My computer has a brand new motherboard and as I wrote above, booting from a USB stick worked when the hard drive was virgin. It turns out that when there is an OS I have to boot from a Boot Menu during the boot process. Choosing that menu gave me the options to boot from, I selected USB and got Fedora's boot menu from Live image. Next, I tried with boot.iso and that worked too! In other words, just fixing the boot order in BIOS of my mobo with the removable device as the first option doesn't work, I must choose the USB device from a Boot Menu (have to press F8 during boot). So it was my fault in the sense that I wasn't aware of how my new motherboard worked. Sorry for all the noise. -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines