turn off your computer, plug in the key, press the power button to turn it on, then immediately and repeatedly press your boot menu key, it’s probably of the f keys above the numbers on your keyboard, if you have an hp laptop it’s going to be f9 otherwise it’s often f12 but that can be any other one, try googling it, then you will have a menu appear which lets your select “usb something whatev” select it and press enter, if that doesn work, you’ll have to learn all about configuring your bios to run linux
alright that’s good, that means it’s seeing the key as bootable, you need to enter the bios config, same procedure, but it’s another f key, then you will find an option that’s called secure boot and you can change it from “enabled” to “disabled”, on some bios, you first need to erased the stored secure boot key first
it shouldn’t reset your device, secure boot is only there to prevent someone from doing exactly what you’re trying to do, booting another os on the computer, that said, if you’re going to mess around with a linux installer without full knowledge of what you are doing you should absolutely back up your entire drive first, the easiest method being phisically removing the hard drive and putting another one in
turn off your computer, plug in the key, press the power button to turn it on, then immediately and repeatedly press your boot menu key, it’s probably of the f keys above the numbers on your keyboard, if you have an hp laptop it’s going to be f9 otherwise it’s often f12 but that can be any other one, try googling it, then you will have a menu appear which lets your select “usb something whatev” select it and press enter, if that doesn work, you’ll have to learn all about configuring your bios to run linux
From my experience: F2, F8, F9, F10, F12, Delete.
I always wondered why none of them could agree on which f key does what, especially when they all already agree that ctrl-alt-del restart the computer
Ctrl-alt-del was part of the IBM PC BIOS, which everyone cloned. There was no boot menu or configuration interface back then.
My asrock mobo takes an F9 for bios and F11 for boot menu
My problem is that secure boot blocks it. Ventoy plugson says “secure boot support enable”
Go to the BIOS/UEFI settings and disable secure boot
Its not booting because of secure boot. How do I let it work in secure boot. I am using ventoy
alright that’s good, that means it’s seeing the key as bootable, you need to enter the bios config, same procedure, but it’s another f key, then you will find an option that’s called secure boot and you can change it from “enabled” to “disabled”, on some bios, you first need to erased the stored secure boot key first
I’m sorry but I don’t get what you mean. If I disable secure boot does my device get reset?
it shouldn’t reset your device, secure boot is only there to prevent someone from doing exactly what you’re trying to do, booting another os on the computer, that said, if you’re going to mess around with a linux installer without full knowledge of what you are doing you should absolutely back up your entire drive first, the easiest method being phisically removing the hard drive and putting another one in
How do I disable secure boot? Or at elast get my USB to run
These may help you to understand what Secure Boot is.
https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/design/device-experiences/oem-secure-boot
https://wiki.debian.org/SecureBoot
You dont need to disable secure boot, you just need to enroll the ventoy keys: https://www.ventoy.net/en/doc_secure.html