

- #UNETBOOTIN NOT RESPONDING SETTING UP PERSISTENCE MAC OS#
- #UNETBOOTIN NOT RESPONDING SETTING UP PERSISTENCE INSTALL#
If you want the cutting-edge, as long as your USB drive and host computer's RAM have enough space, downloading Wine from Git and Building Wine from source should also work essentially the same. We also package recent development and staging versions of Wine for a few distros you can find out more at our Downloads page.
#UNETBOOTIN NOT RESPONDING SETTING UP PERSISTENCE INSTALL#
If you're ok with the version packaged by the distro itself, you should be able to install Wine through the package manager. Once you have a persistent live-USB ready and working, installing Wine itself shouldn't be too hard at all. This setting will allow your live-USB to record any changes to settings and files when you log off, which is exactly what you need to install Wine and your programs to the drive. Whether you choose a live-USB creator or to follow your distro's specific instructions manually, just be sure to enable persistence when you install the distro to your USB. If that doesn't work, you may just need to follow special instructions for manually creating your live-USB (Ubuntu's live-USB for OS X instructions are a good example) This doesn't mean you can't create a portable installation for running on Macs the tool Mac Linux USB Loader supposedly can, but we haven't tested this software before.
#UNETBOOTIN NOT RESPONDING SETTING UP PERSISTENCE MAC OS#
As a result, even though UNetbootin runs on Mac OS X, it can't create a live-USB image bootable on OS X. Mac computers have a picky boot-loader and will not accept the file structure typically used on live-USBs. Not only can this create your live-USB install from a pre-downloaded ISO, or download the ISO itself, but it makes configuring other settings for your live-USB simple, and can be used entirely from within Windows. You can always just go to your preferred distro's website and download an ISO image, but another option definitely worth considering is the UNetbootin tool. If you don't have one in mind, two well-known Linux distros that historically focused on portability are KNOPPIX and Puppy, but most major distros including Fedora and Ubuntu now offer live-USB versions.Īnother distro you might find interesting is Zorin OS, which tries to make Linux as familiar to Windows users as possible and consequently includes a version of Wine right out of the box.

The next ingredient is the ISO image of whatever distro you want to run Wine on. Anywhere from just a few to hundreds of GB for your programs and data, depending entirely on your needs.Another GB if you plan to keep and compile from source on the drive.

