I wish. That would be nice to have one for a USB key.
If your motherboard supports it, you can have the USB key drive listed first in the boot order to have it boot from the USB automatically when plugged in. However, you may have to change it so that the hard drive was listed before the USB key in the boot order when the computer is restarted during installation from the USB key to prevent the computer from booting right back into the USB key starting the installation process over and over.
I am running into this as well. I get around it by pulling out the drive when it reboots. It must have all the files it needs by then because I have done 2 installs this way. I wish I had a better way.
My Computer
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Keeps changing - (Custom)
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 860
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-P55-UD4P
Memory
4GB DDR3 Mushkin 1600Mhz @ 7-8-7-20
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GTS250 1GB DDR3 Twin Frozr
Sound Card
Onboard realtek
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 24" P2450 + Samsung 20" 2033
Screen Resolution
1920 X 1080 and 1600 X 900 (#2 system 1440 X 900)
Hard Drives
Patriot Inferno 120GB SSD + 3 WD Blue 640GB drives
PSU
Corsair 750 HX Modular
Case
Lancool PC-K62
Cooling
Cooler Master TX3 CPU cooler and 4-140mm and 1-120mm case
Keyboard
Gigabyte USB keyboard
Mouse
Microsoft wireless laser mouse 5000
Internet Speed
7 Mb down 1.5 up
Other Info
System #2: AMD Phenom II X6 1055T (Freezer 7 Pro cooler) - Gigabyte 880GMA-UD2H - WD 500GB Black - 9500GT (1GB) 500W OCZ modular PSU - Antec 200 case. System #3 (LapTop) Core 2 Duo T6670 - 320GB 7200RPM HD - 4GB DDR3 RAM.
That's a good video. I have watched it 3-4 times now. I guess it works okay to remove the drive after it loads files the first time. This does not show what happens when it reboots. You just have to be watching closely. Thanks.
My Computer
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Keeps changing - (Custom)
OS
Windows 7 Professional x64
CPU
Intel Core i7 860
Motherboard
Gigabyte GA-P55-UD4P
Memory
4GB DDR3 Mushkin 1600Mhz @ 7-8-7-20
Graphics Card(s)
MSI GTS250 1GB DDR3 Twin Frozr
Sound Card
Onboard realtek
Monitor(s) Displays
Samsung SyncMaster 24" P2450 + Samsung 20" 2033
Screen Resolution
1920 X 1080 and 1600 X 900 (#2 system 1440 X 900)
Hard Drives
Patriot Inferno 120GB SSD + 3 WD Blue 640GB drives
PSU
Corsair 750 HX Modular
Case
Lancool PC-K62
Cooling
Cooler Master TX3 CPU cooler and 4-140mm and 1-120mm case
Keyboard
Gigabyte USB keyboard
Mouse
Microsoft wireless laser mouse 5000
Internet Speed
7 Mb down 1.5 up
Other Info
System #2: AMD Phenom II X6 1055T (Freezer 7 Pro cooler) - Gigabyte 880GMA-UD2H - WD 500GB Black - 9500GT (1GB) 500W OCZ modular PSU - Antec 200 case. System #3 (LapTop) Core 2 Duo T6670 - 320GB 7200RPM HD - 4GB DDR3 RAM.
It's easier just to pull up the boot menu and start the instillation from there so that you don't have to worry about re-ordering anything or the instillation starting over.
It's easier just to pull up the boot menu and start the instillation from there so that you don't have to worry about re-ordering anything or the instillation starting over.
I wanted to do an UNATTENDED install. Normally from a CD / DVD the "Enter any key" prompt appears and if you DON'T enter anything it will continue booting from the Disk.
I wanted the same facility from the USB -- the whole point was to be able to stick the USB in and after the initial language prompt was to be able to walk away until the installation had finished.
When the machine re-boots with the USB stick still in it it will start the whole process FROM SCRATCH again so you either have to wait for the re-boot and pull the stick out or change the boot order.
Cheers
jimbo
My Computer
Computer type
PC/Desktop
Computer Manufacturer/Model Number
Custom built, several laptops HP/ASUS
OS
Linux CENTOS 7 / various Windows OS'es and servers
If your internal harddisk is configured as first boot device in the bios and you select the usb drive from the F8 boot menu, then the machine will boot from usb just once.
Wow, in all my years as a compter tech, that's the first I've heard of a computer without one. It's as much of a standard as the POST check. Maybe it's on a different button, F2 maybe?