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Episode: 3968
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Title: HPR3968: About USBimager - part 1/2
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3968/hpr3968.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 18:06:18
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3968 for Wednesday the 18th of October 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, About USB Immigra Part 1 of 2.
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It is hosted by Ray Toe and is about 11 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is, Why You Should Be Using USB Immigra 2 and Introduction.
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You are listening to a show from the Reserve Q.
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We are airing it now because we had free slots that were not filled.
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This is a community project that needs listeners to contribute shows in order to survive.
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Please consider recording a show for Hacker Public Radio.
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Hi, this is your host, Ray Toe, and this is a show about USB Immigra recorded on 27th of July 23.
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The headings I will talk about today, short introduction of image writing software,
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other similar software than USB Imature, how I learned about USB Imature, usage of USB Imature.
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So, let's get started.
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My short introduction of image writing software is really short.
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Well, if you have a Raspberry, or Range, or a Rock Pi, a friendly Alec, an OliMix, HardColonel, or Pine64 device,
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you will have to flash an SD card sooner or later.
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Another scenario, like write the backup of your Raspberry Pi image on a SD card,
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an image of your favorite Linux distribution, or true NOS on your memory stick.
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Just to name a few, where you may want to need an image writing software.
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There are known software like DD, like Delta Delta, but as I will explain in the next section,
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there is an important difference between a pure writing software, which may be very helpful in some scenarios,
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but in others not.
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But before I tell you the difference between DD and the image writing software,
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I want to tell you first about other similar software than USB Imature.
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Now, depending on your operating system, whether it is Linux, Mac, or Windows,
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you have a variety of image writing software to choose from.
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I will now bring you some examples for Windows, just for Windows.
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There is Rufus.
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You find the links in the show notes for this software.
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This is a Windows only one, and the link will be for a GitHub.
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Rufus is quite well known, and another one is called USB Image Tool.
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Again, Windows only.
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This is on a German web page, olexpage.de, also the link is in the show note.
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And Windows only last update 2017.
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Doesn't mean that the software has a problem just because it is 2017.
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Maybe there was just nothing to do.
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This one you find on Source Forge, I will also put the link in the show notes.
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So, these were just for Windows.
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Now, about a software that is for multiple operating systems.
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Baleena etcher, for example.
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It is a large electron program.
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Well, all electron programs are basically large, as they bring a browser with them.
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I stopped using Baleena etcher a long time ago, which I will explain again in the next section.
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And then there is another one I would like to mention that is now Linux only.
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And this is a special one.
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W-O-E-U-S-P as the ranger among the flashing tools.
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It is a bash script, a big bash script.
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It is 65 kilobytes in size.
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To flash the Windows operating system with Linux on a memory stick.
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Not many write image writing software is capable on Linux to flash Windows on a memory stick.
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You maybe help somebody from a family or a friend and you have to have Windows on a memory stick.
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And then, so W-O-E-U-S-B may be handy in that situation.
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That's the reason why I mention it here.
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And now we are in the section where I bring the answer to the things I started before.
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This is how I learned about USB Imager.
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This was around 2020, if I remember correctly, on the OMBN GitHub.
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Discussion was started about Baleena etcher, its size and data privacy.
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In the begin Baleena etcher, I am helped to solve a lot of problems.
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I think I started using it somewhere around 2017, somewhere there.
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And one of the reason why is Baleena etcher was one of the only software that does a writing verification.
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This is very important because back in the days on OMBN, a lot of or many of the problems in the forum were because of bad written SD cards.
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So this is why I mentioned before DD or others.
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They would just write an image on it, but they would not have by default writing verification.
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So check if every byte that should be there is there and on the right place.
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And with the beginning of Baleena etcher, we could reduce a lot of problems with SD card, which brought less requests in the forum.
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But then as this discussion started, we opened the thread on the OMBN forum and discussed about other solutions than Baleena etcher.
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What is available?
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And at that time, people brought in different possibilities.
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And one was a USB Imature.
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And USB Imature offered the writing and verification of what it was written.
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But you would have to set the tick by yourself to make the verification.
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Now this was a no-go, it was a must have for OMBN to have the tick set at the beginning.
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The standard user should not even think about whether he should set the tick or not, it should be already there.
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So one of the guys wrote to the developer of USB Imature if he could make this as a default setting, that the writing verification is activated.
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And he did.
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And with his next release, which was couple days later, which was brilliant.
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And so we started to do some testing.
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So just as an idea about how to USB Imature in the description from the main page is written,
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USB Imature is a really, really simple GUI application that writes compressed disk images to USB drives and creates backups.
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Its interface is as simple as it gets totally bloated free.
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There is a more text there, but I think this brings it very well to the point.
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It is along with the UNIX philosophy, make each program do one thing well.
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So as I said, it has this writing verification activated.
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And if you have an USB 3 memory stick, be aware not every USB 3 is fast.
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You have to be very careful, which USB 3 you buy, USB 3 can be as slow as USB 2.
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But to give you a number, I wrote that at that time, the Ubuntu 20.04, this was 2.3 gigabyte within one minute.
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And this included writing verification.
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So this meant it wrote pretty fast.
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It took about, well, it wrote 38 megabytes per second.
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If you have a faster memory stick, maybe even faster.
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It's really pretty fast.
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Aside from being fast, you have zero load on the CPU.
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The program is really nice.
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If you go on the GitLab page, you see that the developer has written a PDF manual.
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So for those users who read manuals and are interested how to set it up correctly,
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or how to use it on a Mac, how to use it on Windows, how to use it on Linux.
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And what can I do on the command line?
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So you can have a PDF, but you can also just go along with the main page, for example,
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which is also very well documented.
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So this was then the switch to USB image for me.
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It is now also the favorite one for Armbian.
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I try to introduce it to DietPie as well.
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But, well, this was maybe one and a half years ago.
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They were not so keen to go for it because there was something on a Mac.
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But I don't have a Mac, so I cannot test it.
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So, this was the first part of my introduction of USB image.
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In the next part, I will talk about the usage of USB image.
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I will share the download as well.
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If you like, leave a comment or send me a message.
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Have a nice one.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at HackerPublicRadio.org.
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Today's show was contributed by a HPR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording podcasts, you click on our contribute link
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to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HPR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com,
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the internet archive and our sync.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons,
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Attribution 4.0 International License.
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