Yes , all flash drives work on ubuntu
Get unetbootin from ubuntu's website. Select the ISO from your hard drive then reboot and boot from USB! Voila!
When you choose the installation partition to install on, choose your flash drive then on startup, hold the option key down, it should show you your flash drive partition to boot up with.
Please see the related link below for an example of running ubuntu Linux from a usb flash drive. Linux is installed on the usb drive allowing you to boot directly from it.
install ubuntu-restricted-extras from the package repositories or ubuntu software center.
Ubuntu 7.10 is a Linux Operating System/Distro. Once installed on a computer or flash drive that is in the computer you should be able to connect to it on power up. If not make sure it installed correctly or try reinstalling it.
Yes, that is possible for an OS that is designed to be compact. FE Ubuntu can be installed, and DamnSmallLinux (complete OS on a USB-drive) Just set the BIOS to the target drive (switch the C: to the usb-drive) and you are ready to go!
You do not need to "initiate" a hard drive. If the hard drive is installed correctly, Ubuntu will detect it.
This is illegal and should not be done.
Yes. This is the preferred and most common method for installing Ubuntu.
You can't. You have to buy a 16gb flash drive.
To transfer information from a flash drive to another flash drive the information must be uploaded to a computer from flash drive A then uploaded from the computer to flash drive B.
No. After download and burn the Ubuntu 10.10 install disk, you can either TRY Ubuntu without affecting your Windows at all, or INSTALL Ubuntu to have them both in your PC. However, to install Ubuntu, you need to be careful. Make sure not to install Ubuntu to the Windows drive. That is all.