Debian-Live stucked on grub [closed]

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I downloaded Debian-Live and write it to USB.



When I boot from USB I get to grub and if I click Debian Live I see a screen blink like I clicked it but It wont boot, I'm still in GRUB. Pressing Install, Graphic install have same problem?







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closed as too broad by Rui F Ribeiro, slm♦ Jul 19 at 13:57


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • In order to help us help you, please tell us 1. the brand name and model of the computer and of the graphics chip/card; 2. Which iso file you are starting from (name of the iso file); 3. Did you check the iso file with md5sum (or some other checksum)? 4. Which tool did you use to create the USB boot drive?
    – sudodus
    Jul 19 at 14:14
















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












I downloaded Debian-Live and write it to USB.



When I boot from USB I get to grub and if I click Debian Live I see a screen blink like I clicked it but It wont boot, I'm still in GRUB. Pressing Install, Graphic install have same problem?







share|improve this question













closed as too broad by Rui F Ribeiro, slm♦ Jul 19 at 13:57


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.














  • In order to help us help you, please tell us 1. the brand name and model of the computer and of the graphics chip/card; 2. Which iso file you are starting from (name of the iso file); 3. Did you check the iso file with md5sum (or some other checksum)? 4. Which tool did you use to create the USB boot drive?
    – sudodus
    Jul 19 at 14:14












up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











I downloaded Debian-Live and write it to USB.



When I boot from USB I get to grub and if I click Debian Live I see a screen blink like I clicked it but It wont boot, I'm still in GRUB. Pressing Install, Graphic install have same problem?







share|improve this question













I downloaded Debian-Live and write it to USB.



When I boot from USB I get to grub and if I click Debian Live I see a screen blink like I clicked it but It wont boot, I'm still in GRUB. Pressing Install, Graphic install have same problem?









share|improve this question












share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jul 19 at 13:57









slm♦

232k65479649




232k65479649









asked Jul 19 at 10:43









user301362

1




1




closed as too broad by Rui F Ribeiro, slm♦ Jul 19 at 13:57


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.






closed as too broad by Rui F Ribeiro, slm♦ Jul 19 at 13:57


Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer. Avoid asking multiple distinct questions at once. See the How to Ask page for help clarifying this question. If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.













  • In order to help us help you, please tell us 1. the brand name and model of the computer and of the graphics chip/card; 2. Which iso file you are starting from (name of the iso file); 3. Did you check the iso file with md5sum (or some other checksum)? 4. Which tool did you use to create the USB boot drive?
    – sudodus
    Jul 19 at 14:14
















  • In order to help us help you, please tell us 1. the brand name and model of the computer and of the graphics chip/card; 2. Which iso file you are starting from (name of the iso file); 3. Did you check the iso file with md5sum (or some other checksum)? 4. Which tool did you use to create the USB boot drive?
    – sudodus
    Jul 19 at 14:14















In order to help us help you, please tell us 1. the brand name and model of the computer and of the graphics chip/card; 2. Which iso file you are starting from (name of the iso file); 3. Did you check the iso file with md5sum (or some other checksum)? 4. Which tool did you use to create the USB boot drive?
– sudodus
Jul 19 at 14:14




In order to help us help you, please tell us 1. the brand name and model of the computer and of the graphics chip/card; 2. Which iso file you are starting from (name of the iso file); 3. Did you check the iso file with md5sum (or some other checksum)? 4. Which tool did you use to create the USB boot drive?
– sudodus
Jul 19 at 14:14










1 Answer
1






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up vote
1
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Try using the nomodeset kernel boot option. Adding the nomodeset parameter instructs the kernel to not load video drivers and use BIOS modes instead until X is loaded.




The smaller netinst CD image is easier to boot than the full size Debian image. The netinst CD image generally 150-300 MB, varies by architecture.



A "network install" or "netinst" Debian CD is a single CD which enables you to install the entire operating system. The network install CD contains the word "install" for a reason. It is not a Debian live CD, rather it is specifically used for installing Debian. This single CD contains just the minimal amount of software to start the installation and fetch the remaining packages over the internet. To write a CD image to a USB flash drive follow these instructions from www.debian.org.






share|improve this answer























  • I need a Live CD
    – user301362
    Jul 19 at 11:13


















1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
1
down vote













Try using the nomodeset kernel boot option. Adding the nomodeset parameter instructs the kernel to not load video drivers and use BIOS modes instead until X is loaded.




The smaller netinst CD image is easier to boot than the full size Debian image. The netinst CD image generally 150-300 MB, varies by architecture.



A "network install" or "netinst" Debian CD is a single CD which enables you to install the entire operating system. The network install CD contains the word "install" for a reason. It is not a Debian live CD, rather it is specifically used for installing Debian. This single CD contains just the minimal amount of software to start the installation and fetch the remaining packages over the internet. To write a CD image to a USB flash drive follow these instructions from www.debian.org.






share|improve this answer























  • I need a Live CD
    – user301362
    Jul 19 at 11:13















up vote
1
down vote













Try using the nomodeset kernel boot option. Adding the nomodeset parameter instructs the kernel to not load video drivers and use BIOS modes instead until X is loaded.




The smaller netinst CD image is easier to boot than the full size Debian image. The netinst CD image generally 150-300 MB, varies by architecture.



A "network install" or "netinst" Debian CD is a single CD which enables you to install the entire operating system. The network install CD contains the word "install" for a reason. It is not a Debian live CD, rather it is specifically used for installing Debian. This single CD contains just the minimal amount of software to start the installation and fetch the remaining packages over the internet. To write a CD image to a USB flash drive follow these instructions from www.debian.org.






share|improve this answer























  • I need a Live CD
    – user301362
    Jul 19 at 11:13













up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









Try using the nomodeset kernel boot option. Adding the nomodeset parameter instructs the kernel to not load video drivers and use BIOS modes instead until X is loaded.




The smaller netinst CD image is easier to boot than the full size Debian image. The netinst CD image generally 150-300 MB, varies by architecture.



A "network install" or "netinst" Debian CD is a single CD which enables you to install the entire operating system. The network install CD contains the word "install" for a reason. It is not a Debian live CD, rather it is specifically used for installing Debian. This single CD contains just the minimal amount of software to start the installation and fetch the remaining packages over the internet. To write a CD image to a USB flash drive follow these instructions from www.debian.org.






share|improve this answer















Try using the nomodeset kernel boot option. Adding the nomodeset parameter instructs the kernel to not load video drivers and use BIOS modes instead until X is loaded.




The smaller netinst CD image is easier to boot than the full size Debian image. The netinst CD image generally 150-300 MB, varies by architecture.



A "network install" or "netinst" Debian CD is a single CD which enables you to install the entire operating system. The network install CD contains the word "install" for a reason. It is not a Debian live CD, rather it is specifically used for installing Debian. This single CD contains just the minimal amount of software to start the installation and fetch the remaining packages over the internet. To write a CD image to a USB flash drive follow these instructions from www.debian.org.







share|improve this answer















share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Jul 19 at 11:22


























answered Jul 19 at 11:02









karel

706817




706817











  • I need a Live CD
    – user301362
    Jul 19 at 11:13

















  • I need a Live CD
    – user301362
    Jul 19 at 11:13
















I need a Live CD
– user301362
Jul 19 at 11:13





I need a Live CD
– user301362
Jul 19 at 11:13



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