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Look in the System Settings -> Actions -> Download. You will see several ways to verify an ISO |
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There are many newcomers from Windows who have no idea how to use the Terminal, or what the commands mean.
Even with a nicely written documentation like Mint install docs some newcomers struggle, for example. There are many more examples.
Of course we can say that "well they have to learn at some point and get used to it", but some newcomers simply leave, or get wrong results because they are in the wrong directory / some file is missing, or just try installing unverified ISOs and run into problems during installation (because the download did not complete fully / correctly, etc.)
Currently the nice GUI verification available on Mint uses
mint-iso-verify
, which uses theverify.py
file in/usr/bin/mintstick
:How easy / difficult would it be to make
mintstick
+verify.py
cross-platform so that it could be used on Windows and Mac directly, or in the case of the above example, easily installable / usable on other Linux distros? So these users can verify graphically without the Terminal. I suppose it also depends ongpg
andsha256sum
. Maybe it's more difficult than I think?mintstick
can be installed on Ubuntu by downloading the.deb
package from Mint repo but does it come withverify.py
and the/usr/bin/mint-iso-verify
script after installation?And I'm aware that even if this is possible,
mintstick
itself would have to be trusted first... 😕Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
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