I heard Mint is supposed to be the simplest distro to get started with but my experience so far (following the setup guide on the website) has been:
- Download ISO
- Check ISO (seemed fine)
- Burn image… crash
- Burn image in administrator mode
- Boot from USB via BIOS… crash
- Boot from USB via Bios in safe mode
- Download multimedia codecs… crash
- Not download multimedia codecs… also crash?
And that’s where I am presently, it runs fine off the USB albeit a bit slow, and I know its connected to the internet because I can browse lemmy on it and make annoying posts on the Linux community. I knew Linux was going to be more work than windows but this feels like a ridiculous level of effort right out of the gate, I worry that even if I somehow get it running I’ll spend 10x more time fixing it than actually using it.
If it’s crashing when even burning the ISO, it’s not Mint.
I mean I got past that part as per the list. I’ve installed a custom win10 on the same laptop using the same USB before and it worked flawlessly. So far Mint just seems to be far more finicky about hardware than win10.
Yeah but if the crash is happening when burning the ISO then that’s the problem of whatever software and OS you’re using to do that, i.e. the ISO burning tool and Windows. An ISO is an ISO. As described, this problem is nothing to do with Linux. Phew! Once you fix this issue you’ll find Mint is easy peasy and you won’t look back. So keep at it.
Try a different USB
Try unetbootin on windows to create the liveUSB
Define crash: exception thrown, Windows crashing, hard freeze…etc
Sure sounds like you have a bad USB drive to me if it’s only happening when using this USB device. Error messages would be helpful.
Sounds like your USB is fucked to be honest.
No, I wouldn’t expect any issues with Mint.
- what’s your hardware
- you say burn, but then mention USB, what are you using to create the install media? If I’m making a bootable usb in windows I exclusively use Rufus and haven’t had issues to date
Seconding rufus. I dont use anything else. This is the way.
Fedora Media writer and Etcher are fine as well
Disks works for this on Ubuntu / Pop_OS too
Gnome disks will work on anything gnome based. It isn’t great for writing images though. I would rather just use dd since I’m on Linux already
To add to this, if you’ve only been trying to write the ISO to a USB drive this whole time have you tried different USB drives as well?
- Download ISO
- Create bootable USB
- Boot from USB
- Install
- profit
This was my experience with Mint.
Just want to say this it sucks that you’re experiencing issues with something that should be so easy, always frustrating when something like that happens. Can assure you it’s not an issue with Mint though, hopefully this doesn’t put you off from using such a great distro.
This definitely wasn’t my experience, what USB drive are you using?
If you’re looking for a good USB drive I highly recommend the standard Sandisk Ultra (the bulky usb3.0 one) , it’s very performant and reliable for the price.
After reading the new behavior I’m fairly confident it’s hardware failure from the laptop, most likely the drive. I’ve experienced odd install failure behavior like this before which was a sad going bad.
OP has said a few times that they have installed windows from the USB previously without issues. Please remember that all hardware will eventually go bad. Just because it worked in the past, that doesn’t guarantee it would work today.
anytime I see linux + crash and no hardware specified, I assume it’s Nvidia and stop reading.
It’s sad that hardware issues can prevent linux from working. One has no way to know the core of the issue…