======================================================================== If you want to boot RIP from a USB Flash drive. ======================================================================== You can write any bootable RIP ISO to a CD/DVD, using cdrecord etc. You can also write any (except GRUB2 version) bootable RIP ISO to a USB flash drive. Example: dd if=RIPLinuX-13.7.iso of=/dev/sdb bs=1M "Under Linux!" Example: dd if=RIPLinuX-13.7.iso of=\\.\e: bs=1M "Under Windows!" There's a Windows version of "dd" here. http://www.tux.org/pub/people/kent-robotti/looplinux/rip You'll lose anything on the USB flash drive, but any remaining space on the drive can be used by using fdisk to create a second partition, and putting a FAT32 etc. filesystem on it. You can create a second partition on /dev/sdb by using "mkpart" from the RIP Linux system. # mkpart b all /dev/sdb # mkdosfs -F32 /dev/sdb2 The above example assumes your USB flash drive is on /dev/sdb. You can also use this Windows USB installer to put RIP on a USB drive. Choose "RIP Linux" from its menu, then browse to where RIPLinuX-13.7.iso is on your hard drive etc. It should work with any RIP ISO, but your USB flash drive should be at least 256MB and FAT16 or FAT32 formatted. http://www.pendrivelinux.com/universal-usb-installer-easy-as-1-2-3 Another method for putting RIP on a USB flash drive is using the "mkusb.sh" script, under Linux. ========= Install RIP to the USB drive, using mkusb script ========= The USB drive should have at least 150 MB free. # bash mkusb.sh RIPLinuX-X.X.iso /dev/sdb1 The above example assumes the USB drive's partition is on /dev/sdb1! # fdisk -l "To find the device the USB drive is on!" If the USB drive is not partitioned and FAT16 or FAT32 formatted, use the '-f' option, because it must be partitioned and FAT formatted. You'll loose anything on the USB drive! # bash mkusb.sh -f RIPLinuX-X.X.iso /dev/sdb "The device must not end with a number!" Instead of specifying an ISO image, you can specify a source directory that contains the contents of the ISO image, laid out the same way as the ISO image. # bash mkusb.sh source_directory /dev/sdb1 ATTENTION! You can also mount a RIP CD and run 'mkusb.sh' from it. # mount /dev/sr0 /mnt/cdrom # bash /mnt/cdrom/boot/mkusb.sh -h "For Help!" # bash /mnt/cdrom/boot/mkusb.sh /mnt/sr0 /dev/sdb1 The above example assumes your CD drive is /dev/sr0 and your USB drive's partition is /dev/sdb1! =========================================================================