![]() I don't think that there is a relatively easy way to accomplish such an installation from Windows. Liberté had to be installed on a separate partition, which had to be the second one (Windows sees only the first partition on removable disks). The first release of Liberté (2010.0, this one is actually the second release) used GRUB Legacy, and correct installation was a nightmare from the maintenance point of view. On boot, SYSLINUX or GRUB, which is installed with a single click by some program like usb-creator, would present the user with a choice of which directory (containing a live.ini) to base the boot on. Much better than the current state of affairs, which amounts to semin-reliable unetbootin, usb-creator and friends. We could even introduce a cross-distro convention how the layout of a Linux live USB stick should look like. That makes it less scary than an arcane assortment of SYSLINUX.XYZ and CASPAR directory entries. I wish Ubuntu would put its live media contents into a single folder as well, on a CD as well as on a USB stick. Syslinux (and GNU Parted if /dev/XXX is a partition) must be installed. (Linux) Copy liberte/setup.sh to a local directory, and run setup.sh /dev/XXX as root providing the (unmounted) media to which you extracted the archive as the argument. You probably need to right-click and select Run as administrator in Vista and in Windows 7 read the console messages. (Windows) In liberte folder, launch setup.bat. Extract the archive into the root folder of the media you want to use.ģ. Download liberte-201X.Y.zip from the SourceForge project site.Ģ. ![]()
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