Because those ISOs are meant to be written directly to a disc or a drive.
However, it seems that Rufus has a dd mode. You can use that instead :)
Because those ISOs are meant to be written directly to a disc or a drive.
However, it seems that Rufus has a dd mode. You can use that instead :)
Cool! Next time, use Balena Etcher instead of Rufus
Edit: I remember for sure that there was a wiki page that said not to use these tools because they modify the image (I think Rufus extracts the image to a FAT FS?).
However, the Ubuntu wiki now reads:
Rufus Rufus is the tool in Windows that is recommended officially by Ubuntu. A tutorial is available from here.
DK/SE layout is surprisingly good for european languages, say better than the Italian one
I’ve started with lubuntu 11.10 on a Pentium 4. I was 11. Time flies!
Yes, it will just sync a folder between computers
You can also try https://syncthing.net/
Interesting, though I always use dd on Linux