How to create an Antergos Live USB drive in Windows

Antergos is a Linux distribution forked from another popular distro ‘Arch Linux’. Since its launch in 2012, the distribution is one of the fastest growing distributions. The best part of the distribution is how nice it looks.

Some credits go to the juicy looking icons. Thanks to the Numix projects where the icon themes are sourced from.

Antergos uses the GNOME 3 desktop environment by default settings, but you do get the option to choose from other desktop environments including Cinnamon, MATE, KDE Plasma 5 and Xfce desktops. Antergos is released as a rolling distribution which means install it once, and it will get updates forever. There is nothing like end-of-life for a version like seen in other Linux distros including Ubuntu, Linux Mint, elementary OS, and Fedora.

Here is how Antergos 2016 desktop looks like with the ‘Show applications’ turned ON.

Antergos Applications Screen
Antergos Applications Screen

And here is Antergos’s setting app.

Antergos Settings App
Antergos Settings App

Create Antergos Live USB flash drive on Windows

Step 1: Download Antergos ISO image from their official website.

Step 2: Download Rufus utility for Windows. It is a portable utility, so there is nothing to install. Just download and it’s ready for use.

Download Rufus

Step 3: Plug-in an empty USB flash drive of at least 2 GB capacity.

Step 4: Right-click on the Rufus exe file and select ‘Run as administrator’.

Step 5: In the Rufus window, set the following settings:

(#1) Click on the CD drive icon near the checkbox ‘Create a bootable disk using ISO Image’ and select the Antergos ISO file that you downloaded, for example, mine says antergos-2016.11.20-x86_64.iso.

(#2) In the same interface, click on drop-down list under ‘Partition scheme and target system type’, select ‘MBR partition scheme for BIOS or UEFI’.

(#3) Next select file system as ‘FAT32’.

(#4) Finally, click ‘Start’.

Rufus Settings
Rufus Settings

STEP 6: Keep the ISO Image mode to write when prompted and click OK.

Rufus Prompt
Rufus – Keep the ISO image mode

STEP 7: Wait until Rufus writes the data to the USB flash drive.

That’s it. Your Antergos Live USB drive is ready. You can boot into it and test drive Antergos. It also serves as an installation media just in case you decided to install it. Good luck!

Kiran Kumar
Hi there! I'm Kiran Kumar, founder of FOSSLinux.com. I'm an avid Linux lover and enjoy hands-on with new promising distros. Currently, I'm using Ubuntu as a daily driver and run several other distros such as Fedora, Solus, Manjaro, Debian, and some new ones on my test PC and virtual machines. I have a day job as an Engineer, and this website is one of my favorite past time activities especially during Winter ;). When I'm not writing for FOSSLinux, I'm seen biking and hiking on scenic trails. Hope you enjoy using this website as much as I do writing for it. Feedback from readers is something that inspires me to do more, and spread Linux love!. If you find a time, drop me an email or feedback from the 'Contact' page. Or simply leave a comment below if you found this article useful. Have a good day!

1 COMMENT

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

STAY CONNECTED

24,933FansLike
151FollowersFollow

LATEST ARTICLES

RECENT COMMENTS