Tanguy Ortolo: A desktop file managers failure: writing an USB stick image
Installing an operating system
When you want to install a new operating system, the first thing to do is to
get an installer medium, which usually involves two steps: downloading an
image, and writing it to a medium. There are two major types of media usable
for that purpose: optical discs and USB sticks. There used to be a third one,
floppy disks, but it is no longer used, and it was conceptually very similar to
USB sticks.Power-user
If you are a power-user, you probably use USB stick, to be able to reuse
them and because they are easier to carry. For you, writing an optical disc or
an USB drive is almost the same:
Moral
$ wodim image.iso $ dd if=image.img of=/dev/sdcRegular user But what would you suggest to a normal user? USB stick? You should not: while it is technically much easier to write an USB stick (just copy blocks from the image to the peripheral file, without any need to use any specific function), desktop file manager make it much harder. Indeed, for a desktop user, burning an ISO image to an optical disk is quite simple: right-click on the image file and choose the burn option. But writing an image to an USB stick? There is no similar option, so that will involve calling a power-user friend, which will tell you to open a terminal and type dd if= .
- Power-users
- Continue using USB sticks as installation media, but tell regular users to use optical discs until desktop file managers adapt.
- Regular users
- Use optical discs. If your computer does not have an optical reader, either invite a power user friend, or buy an USB optical reader.
- Desktop developers
- Please, fix that! Writing an image to an USB stick should not be harder than burning it to an optical disc! People are using more and more computers without an optical reader, and that situation is certainly not new, as it is only similar to that of the time when we were using floppy disks.