Installing Ubuntu Linux (or any other Linux distro really) onto a USB drive for use with Macs. Prerequisites: • A 64 bit capable Intel Mac (Anything from 2008 or after should be fine i.e Intel Core 2 Duo machines) • A 64 bit EFI capable () Ubuntu iso file or equivalent for your favourite distro. • or similarly capable software for creating an install drive from the.iso file • A 2GB or larger USB for putting the installer on. This will be erased so make sure you take everything important off it. • A USB Flash or Hard Drive of you choice and size (32 GB minimum recommended for Ubuntu 16.04) This will be erased so make sure you take everything important off it. DISCLAIMER: EVEN THOUGH I HAVE USED THIS METHOD MANY TIMES WITH MUCH SUCCESS AND NO ISSUES, I HIGHLY RECOMMEND THAT YOU CREATE A BACKUP OF YOUR CURRENT INSTALLATION USING WHATEVER METHOD YOU CHOOSE. FOLLOW THIS TUTORIAL AT YOUR OWN RISK!!!
• Once you stop the send and receive, the Outbox will be visible (3) in the folder list. • Right click on message in Outbox, choose Open Message • Remove the attachment • Press Send This will re-send the message without the over-sized attachment. If you don't want to send the message, delete it from the outbox instead of removing the attachment. If the Outbox is not visible, and you use Outlook 2016 for Mac, start a Send and Receive then: • Open the Sync Status dialog (1) • Either click the Stop Sync button (2) in the lower left or the little x at the right of the entry to stop the send and receive. Ipad email stuck in outbox.

From ‘YUMI Bootable Multiboot USB Flash Drive Tools’, you can create a multiboot in Linux, antivirus software, system tools, boot CDs, and Windows installation packages in one USB. Go to the following link and download and install YUMI Bootable Multiboot USB Flash Drive Tool. How to Create Windows 10 Bootable USB On Mac June 27, 2017 Donnie Jog 0 Comments Mac, Windows 10 If you want to experience Windows 10 on your Mac, you can now easily create a Windows 10 bootable USB to install on your Mac. 
Note: For this tutorial I am using a Mac with OS X El Capitan, If you are using a Mac with an earlier version of OS X installed then some parts that use Disk Utility will be slightly different. Parallels for mac install windows xp. Step #1: Once you have everything you need a good place to start is Disk Utility. • Open Disk Utility and select the USB drive you wish to boot the installer from and erase it as FAT32 using GPT Partition Table.
For this I am using a 4 GB Sandisk Cruzer from back when they made the 'U3' USBs While still in Disk Utility you can partition your soon to be OS install drive. • • Select the drive and erase it as OS X Extended (Journaled) with the GPT Partition Table, this is because for some reason El Capitan wont let you partition a drive that has been formatted otherwise.
• Once the drive has been erased, open the partitioning window and create the partitions however you want them. I you are not sure, I for example have created three partitions on my drive. The first partition is 50 GB and is for the system (/ mount point) the third partition is 4 Gb for swap and the second partition takes up what ever space is left and is used for the user data (/home mount point) • Click 'Apply' and wait for the disk to Finish partitioning.
Before closing Disk Utility make note of the device 'BSD name' for the USB that you will be putting the installer on. As seen here: Step #2 After formatting the drives, you will need to create the install disk with UNetbootin or your preferred equivalent. • Open UNetbootin, you will be confronted with a prompt to input the credentials of an account with administration rights. • Select the 'Disk Image' option and browse to your.iso file, then select the correct device from the drop down list. It should look something like this before hitting 'OK': Once done, UNetbooting might say something like 'the created USB cannot be used on this computer' this can be ignored as the USB will indeed work on your Macintosh. Restart your Mac and hold down the option key to get to the Boot device selection menu. Select 'EFI Boot' followed by 'Try Ubuntu without installing' to boot into a 'live' version of Ubuntu Step #3 Tip: At this point you may want to use WiFi if you are using a laptop, but you may find that you are unable to if your laptop has a Broadcom wireless chip (Most 802.11AC laptops to my knowledge).