Ladies and gentlemen, we have a winner!
Yes indeed, gnome-disk-utility will do the job. It can be found as 'disks' app in Debian and it is natively installed (at least in my distro - Bookworm).
Similar to the Disk Management app in Windows, it will show you your attached usb stick, you then click the three-dot dropdown as Uptorn says and choose restore disk image, then choose the iso to write to the usb.
the dd way in terminal involves too many steps for my taste and is fairly verbose to remember, from what I've seen... not to mention too much risk of error unless you know exactly what you're doing!
Yes indeed, gnome-disk-utility will do the job. It can be found as 'disks' app in Debian and it is natively installed (at least in my distro - Bookworm).
Similar to the Disk Management app in Windows, it will show you your attached usb stick, you then click the three-dot dropdown as Uptorn says and choose restore disk image, then choose the iso to write to the usb.
the dd way in terminal involves too many steps for my taste and is fairly verbose to remember, from what I've seen... not to mention too much risk of error unless you know exactly what you're doing!
Statistics: Posted by audiobabble — 2024-06-05 05:37