What about the limitation on how many times you can delete information before the device wears out (thinking of things like the /tmp and /var partitions/directories)?<BR><BR><B><I>Brian Kelsay <ripcrd@gmail.com></I></B> wrote: <BLOCKQUOTE class=replbq style="PADDING-LEFT: 5px; MARGIN-LEFT: 5px; BORDER-LEFT: #1010ff 2px solid">You should be using Kubuntu 7.10 for one thing over 7.04. I had problems with 7.04 and the one before. The last good one for me was 6.06.1 LTS.<BR><BR><A href="http://puppylinux.com/flash-puppy.htm">http://puppylinux.com/flash-puppy.htm </A><BR><BR>Boot from a LiveCD of Puppy, from "Setup" menu you will find an entry called "Puppy Universal Installer". Select that, and follow the simple instructions.<BR>or<BR>Boot from a LiveCD of Puppy, use ISOMaster and extract the 3 files: initrd.gz, vmlinuz and pup_xxx.sfs. Copy those to your USB drive manually. You will probably have to mount the drive first. ( <A
href="http://puppylinux.com/flash-puppy.htm">http://puppylinux.com/flash-puppy.htm</A> ) Follow the caveats and stuff. They recommend this method only for an upgrade of an existing USB Puppy system. <BR><BR><SPAN style="FONT-STYLE: italic"><BR></SPAN><BR> <DIV class=gmail_quote>On Jan 10, 2008 12:53 PM, Oren Beck <> wrote:<BR> <BLOCKQUOTE class=gmail_quote style="PADDING-LEFT: 1ex; MARGIN: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; BORDER-LEFT: rgb(204,204,204) 1px solid">Last night I got an Excalibur EXC4:4 gb usb microdrive .<BR>At $19.99 it was a must buy of sorts. <BR>One intended assignment is a portable bootable Linux drive.<BR>Anyone want to show off their "Least Steps" methods to install Puppy or other small Linux onto this? <BR>Both for someone who does NOT have a linux box and /or from Kubuntu 7.04.<BR><BR>Thanks in advance<BR><FONT color=#888888><BR>-- <BR>Oren Beck<BR><BR></FONT></BLOCKQUOTE></DIV><BR>_______________________________________________<BR>Kclug
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