1Jan

Mobaliveusb 0 2 Exe File

Mobaliveusb 0 2 Exe File Average ratng: 6,2/10 8273 votes

Do you want to test whether your pendrive is bootable or not without restarting your computer It is very easy and simple just you need to download tiny application called MobaLiveUSB. Advantage/Merit • Install MobaLiveCS right-clic association. • Start Directly a CD-ROM ISO image File. • Start directly from a bootable pendrive. • Boot check without restarting computer. Instruction/Setup Get MObaLiveUSB () Extract it and copy MobaLiveUSB.exe file to your pendrive Run it with adminstrative right from your pendrive It show the Dialog Box then click 'Run the LiveUSB' and follow the instruction given by it. For Video Instruction: well Done.

Brakes invented pants. Obrazci pechatej cdr. Send the fuck all indiscriminately.

Test bootable USB drive without restarting your computer. Ubuntu from the bootable iso image file.Most. Copy the EXE file to.

I just DL'd Beta 19 and installed it on my VirtualBox ISO test - which boots a 64 meg FAT32 HDD. I use this as a quick test to make sure I have everything just the way I like it. Afterwards I installed Beta 19 on my main USB thumb drive. I notice that on the HDD under VirtualBox (again this is NOT booting via USB just a dedicated virtual HDD) the menus shows a different menu than my USB thumb drive. On the HDD it shows my MAIN menu entries, a dashed delimiter '___' space then 2 entries for DIRECT BOOT another delimiter than POWER OFF, BOOT to FIRST and REBOOT. On my USB thumb drive booted to a physical machine the menus are more like previous Easy2Boot menus with all the menus listed together. No DASH delimiters and the POWER OFF etc mixed in with the main menu entry.

I even deleted the entire GRUB directory and copied it directly from the VB HDD to make sure it's the same. No functionality issues, I was just wondering why the menus look so different. BOTH are fully functional but look a bit different. Yeah, I like the delimiters as well, I often used them in my old hand built menus and had to remember to count them as a menu entry when setting defaults - which was hardly ever an issues as I typically put my defaults in spot 1 or 2 before any delimiters. I've been with you since the first betas and have seen this become a wonderful utility. I seldom (once, twice a year or less) install Windows as we rely on imaging supplied through our corp office through Dell, but I use the hell out of a lot of ISO's and this makes it neat and simple. The only thing I could even remotely suggest is to combine a few more of the subfolders.

It would be great if the WHOLE thing were under ONE subfolder Like /E2B, but I know that's a tough thing to do. You are right. I should do the work to make it all look neat. But anyone who uses a Zalman VE200/300 will want the payload ISOs under _ISO. The Zalman also has a limit of 32 files per folder (which is why I have AUTO and MNU subfolders).

I was thinking of having /_ISO /_ISO/firadisk /_ISO/winvblock /_ISO/MAINMENU /_ISO/AUTO /_ISO/MNU /_ISO/WINDOWS /_ISO/docs /_ISO/grub It would mean a lot of work (changing Easy2Boot files, docs, web site,.mnu files, etc.) and testing it all, and all of my previous tutorials would no longer apply (e.g. #30 and #43) as the paths in those Tuts and downloads would not match the ones in Easy2Boot. It would also break any existing installs of Easy2Boot. Should I ignore Zalman users and use /E2B, or use /_ISO and not worry about people trying to follow Tuts #30 and 43, etc.??? ==================================== Test your bootable USB Flash Drive IN qemu ==================================== 1.Make your Easy2boot flash dive.

2.Download MobaLiveUSB_0.2.exe from link below: 2.Copy MobaLiveUSB_0.2.exe in root of your bootable usb flash drive. (Ex: X: MobaLiveUSB_0.2.exe) 3.Run MobaLiveUSB_0.2.exe inside your flash drive That's all,After few seconds your bootable flash drive will be run in qemu. Font: ============================================ Remember Just for some testing and notting more, Like Steve Said on '/docs/tips/Tips.txt' Always test booting on a real system if it fails to boot under QEMU or a VM!