And I'm wondering if the Mint devs even know about this possibility? I would like to know if my method has any problems, and if others can emulate it and report that it works for them too. Run the 'Install' Installer Wizard and it will take you through to put a working bootable permanent Linux Mint on the second USB without a hitch. While in the Live Mint environment, insert the second USB. Boot into the first USB's Live Linux Mint. (And MAJOR warning: if you don't do this, data may be written to them during the Mint installation process!) This is the secret step: Power down computer and disconnect ALL internal hard disks (and external disks). Install Linux Mint (Live) onto the first USB via your favorite method (like burning the ISO with the cross-platform Etcher). I discovered an EASY way to do it, and it's FDA-approved. I wanted however to make a non-live (persistent) Linux Mint USB, and couldn't find an easy way online to do this!Īll I've found is awkward manual GPT config instructions, or cumbersome terminal commands, or ugly unetbootin methods, or epic guides with a million steps - which all seem a pain to do. v19 looks amazing and it all seems really stable and fast. I'm a bit of a newbie to Linux Mint but I love it so far.
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