Unetbootin.deb -
sudo apt autoremove | Tool | Format | Key Difference | |------|--------|----------------| | Rufus (Windows only) | .exe | More advanced, but not Linux-native | | BalenaEtcher | AppImage/ .deb | Modern UI, direct write (no syslinux) | | Ventoy | .sh script | Installs persistent bootloader, multiple ISOs | | dd command | Terminal | Raw copy, no persistence, dangerous if misused |
sudo apt remove unetbootin sudo apt purge unetbootin # removes config files as well To also remove orphaned dependencies (if no other package needs them): unetbootin.deb
: Keep a copy of unetbootin.deb on a rescue USB – it might be the very tool that helps you revive a broken system. Write-up version 1.0 – Last updated with UNetbootin 702 for Debian/Ubuntu systems. sudo apt autoremove | Tool | Format |
Without these, UNetbootin may fail with cryptic errors like “Failed to install syslinux” or “Cannot mount ISO”. Issue 1: “Unable to find a medium containing a live file system” Cause : The USB drive’s partition layout conflicts with some modern distros (e.g., Ubuntu 20.04+). Solution : After writing with UNetbootin, run: Issue 1: “Unable to find a medium containing
sudo apt install syslinux-utils sudo dd if=/usr/lib/syslinux/modules/bios/mbr.bin of=/dev/sdX (Replace /dev/sdX with your USB device.) Cause : Missing or incorrect syslinux.cfg . Solution : Manually edit /media/username/UNETBOOTIN/syslinux.cfg and change append initrd=/initrd.gz to append initrd=/casper/initrd for Ubuntu-based ISOs. Issue 3: “dpkg: dependency problems prevent configuration” Solution : Run sudo apt --fix-broken install and then reinstall the .deb . Issue 4: UNetbootin does not detect USB drive Solution : Run sudo unetbootin (elevated privileges), or ensure the USB is not mounted and has a partition table ( sudo fdisk -l ). 8. Uninstalling UNetbootin (Clean Removal) Since you installed via .deb , removal is clean:
