Hi,
Thank you for the help!
I checked first the USB and it said that there were no defects, then I checked the Sha256 and it matched.
What should I do?
Hi,
Thank you for the help!
I checked first the USB and it said that there were no defects, then I checked the Sha256 and it matched.
What should I do?
Does the computer you are installing to already have an installed OS on it?
Using either gparted in the Zorin Disk or using a partition Manager on the already installed OS on the computer, can you check whether there are currently Four Primary Partitions in use?
On any OS and any computer, you can only have a Maximum of Four Primary Partitions.
Please make sure that you are using Zorin OS 15.2 Lite or one of the Lite derivatives (Ultimate Lite or Education Lite), as these are the only editions of Zorin OS that run on computers with less than 2 GB of RAM.
After booting the Zorin OS Installation USB drive to the desktop, please follow these steps without opening any other apps:
sudo apt update
Please note that running Zorin OS from a USB drive will run slower and uses more system resources & RAM than after it’s installed to the computer.
Hi,
I tried running the sudo apt update and when it finished I closed the terminal but still, during the guided installation it freezes. I’ll send a pic of gparted, I hope this can help.
It does help; that answered the partitions question perfectly.
Given that it froze on “additional drivers” and during installation, I wonder if the graphics drivers are responsible.
Something you may try:
Boot up the machine from the USB and when you reach the Grub Screen that says
This will open a Terminal Text Editor for a temporary grub. Using your arrow keys, navigate through to where it says “quiet splash.”
Replace just the words “quiet splash” with “quiet splash nomodeset”
Then hit ctrl+x keys to continue onward. Try the installation again.
If it freezes, you can try repeating the above steps but instead of adding “nomodeset”, instead add “quiet splash modprobe.blacklist=nouveau”
And try to install again.
Assuming either of the above gets things moving again, be sure to select the option during installation to install third party drivers.
Once installed, boot up and then immediately repeat Azorins advice above:
Open a terminal and enter in
sudo apt update
then
sudo apt upgrade
Thank you for the detailed answer, but I pressed it and what happen is the countdown to the automatic boot restarts
Can you try using the arrow key to Highlight “Try Zorin” and then hit the “e” key?
I highlighted “Try or Install Zorin OS”, pressed the “E” key but the screen stays still
Sorry for the bad quality pic
Well, then.
Um…
Have you tried dropping down once to Try or Install Zorin OS (safe graphics)?
That does what we are trying to do… and I may be outdated here. 
Based on your screenshot, it looks like you’re seeing the legacy USB boot menu (which appears if your computer doesn’t support UEFI).
Instead of pressing the “e” key here, please press the Tab key to edit the boot parameters as in Aravisian’s post.
This… is good to know. Learned somethin’ new.
Aravisian: Solving problems one step to maybe fifty steps at a time.
No problem 
So, I tried with the tab key, as @AZorin suggested. I modified the text but when I pressed Enter, some text appeared (something like “no caching”), but it always happens but this time it was way more bigger and pixelated and after that a glitchy screen appeared. This happened when I selected the “Safe graphic” option and when I modified the text. It looks like the graphics is not causing the problem, I think, but I don’t know anything about Linux, and you are way more specialized!
I don’t know if it can help, but on the PC I have Lubuntu, recently I typed something wrong in the terminal and after that all system applications couldn’t work with internet, for example I can’t use:
use sudo apt-get update/upgrade
check application updates
Maybe this is causing this issue? Should I try installing another distro and then Zorin?
It sounds like graphics issues to me. I wonder if, as Azorin pointed out, the mode of Legacy being used is involved. Can you go into the MB BIOS and just check that it is set to legacy and what it offers?
I do not think that the Lubuntu setting can affect this installation in any way. This LiveCD and installation is running independently of that.
This is true for installing another distro and then trying the Zorin installation again. And, you may run into the same trouble installing the other distro.
Hi guys, I have a small update!
Guess what? I flashed on the same USB Xubuntu 18.04.5 and I could bypass the updates and drivers step! Now I’m busy, but when I’ll be free I’ll install Xubuntu and then Zorin! And let’s hope everything will be ok
So, I didn’t check the BIOS, but this PC only supports Legacy boot (it’s from 2007)
Hi guys,
I successfully installed Xubuntu. I downloaded again the Zorin ISO and flashed it on the same USB.
It’s stuck (after 1 hour) at the “Updates and other software” page, the only that’s working is the mouse cursor but it’s very laggy
What should I do?
Can you check through the suggestions in this AskUbuntu thread and see if any help?
Hi,
Thanks for sending me this link! Unfortunately, the problem persisted.
For no reason, I downloaded Zorin 12.4 and it worked!
Thanks for the help! So happy to use Zorin! 
So Zorin 15 was still “too new” for the hardware?
Good thing Zorin 12.4 still is supported with updates for a while yet. 
I flashed v.15 and I could install it! The only that’s not working is Wi-Fi, which had no problems in 12.
Could you please start a new thread on that and describe in detail what it is doing? What you have tried, so far. What you see when you check your config in terminal…