Mount an iso of linux or a cd with an iso image onto a new virtual machine.
It doesn't. ISO is a disk image format that is often used to distribute Linux and other CD images.
ISO Master and K3b.
ISO MasterXChatGCompris
"The Kali mini ISO is a convenient way to install a minimal Kali system and install it "from scratch". The mini install ISO will download all required packages from our repositories, meaning you need to have a fast Internet connection to use this installation method."
Yes, you can. You have to use MagicISO on windows to *EDIT* the U3 ISO and not REPLACE it. You can find instructions here: http://wiki.hak5.org/wiki/Talk:Memorex_U3_ISO_Hack Good Luck!
From a terminal: mkdir mountpoint mount -o loop YourImage.iso mountpoint
A ISO image for Linux Mint nowadays goes up to about upwards of 1 gigabyte or so, and when installed, depends on how big the partition(s) you have allocated for it.
You need to use a piece of software capable of understanding an ISO file, or burn the file to a disk. You can use Gizmo for Windows, both the 32- and 64-bit, from here: arainia.com/software/gizmo/download.html. The latest versions of Windows, Linux, and Mac OS will allow you to burn the ISO file to a disk; once you've done so, you can use it as a regular disk. Linux allows an ISO to be mounted directly into the root file system using the "mount" command.
Download the ISO images from Linux Mint's website, and burn it to a DVD or a flash drive and boot from it. Once it boots in a live session, on the desktop there is a icon named "Install Linux Mint" and click on it. Then follow the instructions and you'll be on your way to install Linux Mint.
Install XP Install VMWare Client. If your CPU is 32-bit, get version 3. Download a Linux .iso Run VMWare to create a virtual machine running Linux Dual boot is old school.
google "download kali", look for kali.org site and download the iso file according to your system specs.