yes it should, but as I said some manufacturers were still using 32 bit motherboards at that time
is this the image writer in an existing Linux installation ? then it should work without error
as long as its an ISO file you can burn it to a DVD or write it to a USB it should work either way
this will be a bit of a flyer, try
LMDE7 up to the beginning of this year I was running it on a 2010 dell T series [core2 duo]
Why Linux fails to load/install direct to HDD, common reasons
1] Corrupt download [check SHA sum]
2] bad burn to installation medium [try again] [if you used Rufus then try Balena Etcher or Ventoy]
2A] if optical drive burn at slow speed [no more than x3]
3] Wind 8.2 and higher quick start/fast boot or secure boot not disabled [after disabling do a full power re-boot not a restart]
3A ] check that boot from USB/Optical drive is enabled in your BIOS?UEFI
4] defective pen-drive/DVD
5] hardware fault,
5A] If old style HDD run integrity check
5B]if SATA SSD check for hidden...
Thanks.
"but as I said some manufacturers were still using 32 bit motherboards at that time" Are you saying that the motherboard is 32 bit with 64 CPC on it? And the CPU's capability is limited by the motherboard?
"is this the image writer in an existing Linux installation ? then it should work without error"
Yes, it is. Yeah, it should work without error. But, people say on the internet that they burn live bootables with Balena Etcher or Rufus.
"as long as its an ISO file you can burn it to a DVD or write it to a USB it should work either way" Therefore, there is no ISO file must be use on CD/DVD and not on USB stick?
" try
LMDE7" Just took a look at the ISO file on Linux Mint. Its ISO file is 3G, larger file and heavier OS than Mint Xfce and many other light Linux distros. Wonder if my hardware has the ability to run LMDE7.
My PC cannot burn any CD or DVD. Besides the BIOS, the PC is really a bare metal. I took apart the desktops, three of them, Acer Aspire M5700, dumped everything of the machines but some useful parts, motherboards, CPU with fans, 3 sticks of RAM, HDDs, keybords, mouses, CD/DVD burner, and vga cables, but only one motherboard usable now. Put the usable parts together as a PC (without case) and fix them on a wooden board and have the wooden board fixed to one end of my workbench. Plan to use it for running music, 6 to 7 hours a day when I am working in the room. Use it this way for sack of cooling (my room temperature is 27~28 C year round). There is no any OS. The CD/DVD burner is useless.
Many thanks.
DiaNobb