

As soon as you press the power-on button, keep hitting the Esc button (like tap-tap-tap).Shutdown the computer using the power button.Insert the Ubuntu DVD or Ubuntu USB drive - prepared previously.Once the above is completed, proceed with booting from Ubuntu's media (either USB drive or the DVD you just created): ISO/DVD > How to write ISO to new blank DVD > ISO/Rufus/USB > How to create bootable ISO on USB device > Here is the correct way to write or burn the Ubuntu ISO from within Windows computer: "Send to" is like copying the file to a CD/DVD device with the file system which makes the DVD non-bootable but one that contains files only. Do you think there's something wrong with the DVDs I'm using?
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I found the download in the file system of the Win10, right clicked and selected "send to" "DVD RW drive D:" which asks whether I want to use it "like a USB flash drive" or "with a CD/DVD player." Of course I burned separate disks with each of the options, and neither work the cripple version of Ubuntu 16.04 always takes over. I downloaded " 64-bit PC (AMD64) desktop image" from the Ubuntu web site onto a Win10 system. iso needs to be made bootable, but I'm not sure what's required. Wrote: Another contributor suggested that my.
