
So let’s say I now format it to one full fat32 partition from Windows. This time, only the legacy boot showed up) from the drive, it goes black, and on other computers, it defaults to the PC’s original OS and doesn’t show GRUB at all This is the same thing that happened when I installed Ubuntu Budgie on my drive for the first time using the normal installation method. When asked to choose the bootloader partition, there was an option to choose /dev/sdX (the entire drive), /dev/sdX1 (the rest of the drive), or /dev/sdX2 (the 40MB efi partition I chose /dev/sdX2 set it as an efi partition, and GRUB’s still downloaded to my PC partition (I assume is 100MB in partition size), so when I try legacy booting (with the systems I downloaded before, it gave me a UEFI or legacy boot option from the flash drive. I do use the custom option and got to create 2 partitions in my 16GB flash drive 40MB for GRUB, and the rest for the system the 40MB partition was formatted to fat32 and I deleted the other partition and declared it as free space to be formatted to primary ext4 partition.
#Install bootloader on usb ubuntu install
Said user does not want to worry about conflicting bootloaders, so the user plugs a 512MB USB key to install the bootloader on. Ubuntu Budgie team, please fix this in your isos so that GRUB won’t be installed on the PC and I can use my USB drive to use Ubuntu Budgie on any PC. To preface this A user makes room on their system to install a copy of Ubuntu MATE. I installed the desktop and the Welcome app on Pop!_OS, but the app wasn’t upported, therefore, I couldn’t customize the desktop any further. Ubuntu Budgie has more customization of the Budgie desktop with the Budgie Welcome app. Pop!_OS, on the other hand, does it different I can bootload Pop!_OS an any PC because it does not depend on a bootloader/GRUB to access the system. I did so, but the bootloader (GRUB) is installed on my PC instead of my destined USB drive, with the rest of the Ubuntu Budgie system, no matter what, so I can’t use Ubuntu Budgie on any other PC, like other systems like Chromium OS systems. I don’t like to dualboot systems on my PC’s hard drive, so I decided I’d install systems on a flash drive a safer way to install and use systems you download. Wait about 15-20 minutes as it completes the creation of the USB.



We are creating a USB because we want to get into Ubuntu Bootloader and try to fix it so that we get a boot menu to switch between Windows and Ubuntu.
#Install bootloader on usb ubuntu update
I have a request for the Ubuntu Budgie: I need the team to update the Ubuntu Budgie iso on the download page with an updated installer so that Ubuntu Budgie can successfully be installed on my USB drive. Make sure beforehand to back up any important files.
