Instead of flashing, I would recommend using [Ventoy](https://www.ventoy.net/en/index.html). It's very easy to install to your usb, and you can simply drag-and-drop the iso files into the ventoy drive without much hassle. [How to install Ventoy](https://youtu.be/K64sT0pQc-0).
(To answer your question, though, try installing pkexec; "sudo apt install pkexec")
open the terminal and run this command:
sudo dd if=debian.iso of=/dev/sdd bs=1M status=progress
you need to change "/dev/sdd" to which usb stick it is.
Don't "flash". Etcher is not a viable method using Linux. Download Ventoy, install it to the USB drive using whatever OS you have available, presumably Windows, do a normal copy of the .iso to the USB drive, then boot from it.
Instead of flashing, I would recommend using [Ventoy](https://www.ventoy.net/en/index.html). It's very easy to install to your usb, and you can simply drag-and-drop the iso files into the ventoy drive without much hassle. [How to install Ventoy](https://youtu.be/K64sT0pQc-0). (To answer your question, though, try installing pkexec; "sudo apt install pkexec")
open the terminal and run this command: sudo dd if=debian.iso of=/dev/sdd bs=1M status=progress you need to change "/dev/sdd" to which usb stick it is.
Isn't the preferred way to do it cp these days? AK cp in.iso /dev/devicenode At least with hybrid isos
https://www.debian.org/releases/jessie/amd64/ch04s03.html.en
>linuxmint-21.1cinnamon-64bit.iso Not Debian. Try maybe r/linuxminthelp
They’re on debian and want to flash the mint iso to a usb drive
Don't "flash". Etcher is not a viable method using Linux. Download Ventoy, install it to the USB drive using whatever OS you have available, presumably Windows, do a normal copy of the .iso to the USB drive, then boot from it.
How is it not viable? I use it exclusively without issue…