Success!!! I created a new bootable thumb drive using a version of YUMI that supports UEFI with the latest version of Linux Mint 22 with Cinnamon desktop.
The attempt was stopped because "Secure Boot" was enabled in my BIOS. I had to turn that off and then it booted up to the YUMI customized...
I have a crappy non-GUI American Megatrends BIOS for this mini-PC. F2 or Delete key gets you into this crappy non-GUI BIOS. There is no F12 option to select a boot-device. It's actually doable once in the BIOS, though.
There is no option to select Legacy/CSM. Obviously my BIOS supports the UEFI...
I'm sorry my BIOS doesn't offer this mode anywhere that I can see. My PC that I am trying to do this on is the ASUS PN-50 with Ryzen 5 4500U I believe. I do have 2 systems and I may have stated that wrong in the beginning. This failure to boot off flash (USB 2.0 only made with YUMI) is failing...
I just tried this. Yes, it was successful. I booted up into a Windows setup environment off my 32GB USB 3.0 flash drive plugged into the exact same USB port on my mini-pc. So, maybe my old USB 2.0 flash drive is not right somehow. Although, when I load YUMI to look at the distros it shows them...
I honestly don't know that "Secure Boot" is interfering with my ability to boot off of my old USB 2.0 flash drive or not. Because I just upgrade my motherboard to the Gigabyte mainboard. I've never successfully booted up off of this flash drive on this system. On my old ASRock mainboard it...
I've been trying to boot up into a Linux Mint distro off my old USB 2.0 flash drive which I created with YUMI so I could boot up into 1 of several LIVE Linux distros. It's not working so I got the idea that, maybe, I need to disable "Secure Boot" in my BIOS to get this to work. Well, I did that...