

#UNETBOOTIN PERSISTENT PC#
I'm aware that I can add portuguese to list of languages after english Lubuntu has started by going to Language preferences, but still, there are certain OS components that remain in english (U.S.A.), one example of that being the Login screen: even if I select portuguese (Pt-pt) from language drop-down list, if I then logoff and login again, or if I reboot PC and login, the 'english (U.S.A.)' is always auto-selected repeatedly. Is it possible to get the same language selection screen in first boot of a lubuntu live USB with persistence created with UNetbootin? The language selection would only be necessary in first boot, because, since any changes made to OS would persist in subsequent boots, I'd just have to select 'Default' in UNetbootin boot menu in those subsequent boots or wait until regressive countdown reaches 0.

jpg –, this selection affects not only the language of the boot screen options, but also configures the entire system for that language. When I use the lubuntu Live CD to start a lubuntu Live session, during boot, I get a language selection screen –see i51.tinypic. I like the fact that UNetbootin doesn't format the drive, it writes the iso to the first partition leaving untouched the remaining partitions and sets up persistence automatically, without the need to manually edit any boot file.īut I wanted my lubuntu system to be fully portuguese, not english. Reboot into any working Linux distribution.
#UNETBOOTIN PERSISTENT INSTALL#
Boot into your new LMDE install to ensure it works. Right-click on the partition and select unmount. Do not create any persistence at this time. Open a terminal window ( Ctrl + Alt + T) and remove the persistent file with the following command (adjust this command if the mount point is different in your case): rm -v /media/ubuntu/UUI/casper-rw Refresh GParted ( Ctrl + R) and notice the change in 'Used'. So, I want to create a new Lubuntu bootable flash drive, using this time a Sandisk USB 3.0 flash drive to try to speed things up a little bit, even though my USB ports are USB 2.0. Plug in your target USB drive and use UNetbootin to install a live instance of LMDE. But the flash drive I used was a TOSHIBA USB 2.0, which makes the OS run extremely slowly in every way. Rather than using a casper-rw file, I previously partitioned the USB flash drive to create a casper-rw ext4 partition for persistence. I used UNetbootin unetbootin- windows- 613.exe to create a Lubuntu live USB with persistence, from the ISO lubuntu- 14.04.2- desktop- i386.iso.
