
although slower, it feels very much the same as using it as Installed.

And sometimes, I am a wildman and load up entirely different desktops and distros for testing things as well. I Do Not Use Gnome, but sometimes I need to test something IN Gnome and it is easier to do it on a USB. This is why sometimes the simplest fix for problems that come up after installation is to remove the home ~/.config directory, defaulting back to the same configurations that would have been used during the USB run or Right After a recent installation. And it is less common that something works in Trial but does not work on installation (and the other way around)- That happens not due to drivers as much as due to Configuration. In some case, a more generic module or driver is referenced when used as a Trial instead of as an installation. As a bootable “Try out” medium, it essentially is using the same modules that it would be using when installed. Zorin on USB should work with all your drivers. I really think 64gigs is plenty fine for regular use and exploring the system and getting a feel for it. I say that, while I have never reached twenty gigs but for safety…
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My average OS with Home storage is around 10gigs to a max of 20gigs. iso, if only for the customization possibilities.I, too, use a 64gig stick and I have not come anywhere near to filling it. Couldn’t be more happy, and I think it’s very worth installing a system with the Alma commands rather than the official. There were some glitches with the DE installation, but nothing major, and now I have a much better functioning persistent USB system than I had before.

I did not use any presets – I just did the original install script, then added the Gnome desktop ( Install Desktop Environments - Manjaro) and tinkered to give myself sudoer permission, switched from stable to unstable, added a couple Gnome extensions and so forth. I found out that it’s really, really easy to get a system up and running this way. I decided to wipe the stick and start over with the Alma instructions provided here: GitHub - philmmanjaro/alma: Create Arch Linux based bootable USB drives. iso on a 128GB stick and used it on multiple computers until about a week ago, when I messed something up while addressing cumulated. In August when Phil first put up this post, I installed the.
