-What's the difference between grml2hd and grml2usb?
-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
-
-grml2hd installs a running grml system to a harddisk. When rebooting the
-harddisk installation can be modified and changes will find their way to the
-harddisk immediately. grml2usb copies just the compressed chroot filesystem
-(being the squashfs file), some further informational files and a bootloader to
-your device. This way you don't need as much space as with a harddisk
-installation (just a USB device with >=ISO size) and when rebooting the system
-your changes will be lost (even though a persistent root feature is
-work-in-progress). Think of using a better CD version: booting is (usually)
-faster, you don't need to burn a new CD when a new ISO version arrives (just
-install the new ISO using grml2usb) and you can carry additional files on a
-writable medium with yourself.
+[[download]]
+Where can I get grml2usb?
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+grml2usb is available as Debian package via link:http://deb.grml.org/[the
+grml-testing Debian repository].
+
+If you do not want to (or can't) use the grml2usb Debian package you can either
+use the grml2usb git tree running:
+
+ git clone git://git.grml.org/grml2usb.git
+ cd grml2usb
+ make -C mbr
+ sudo ./grml2usb ...
+
+or download the provided
+link:http://grml.org/grml2usb/grml2usb.tgz[http://grml.org/grml2usb/grml2usb.tgz]
+(link:http://grml.org/grml2usb/grml2usb.tgz.md5.asc[gpg signed md5 hash]).
+Download and extract the tarball and execute the provided script 'install.sh'.
+
+[NOTE]
+It is *NOT* enough to have just the grml2usb script itself without the according
+files provided either via the Debian package, the git tree or the file
+grml2usb.tgz.
+
+[[dd]]
+Why can't I just dd the ISO to a USB device?
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+Well, you can. :) Starting with Grml 2009.10 the ISOs are dd-able straight out-of-the-box.
+
+[IMPORTANT]
+Note that ANY existing data on your USB device will be destroyed when
+using the dd approach.
+
+///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
+Grab a recent Grml ISO and use
+link:http://syslinux.zytor.com/wiki/index.php/Doc/isolinux#HYBRID_CD-ROM.2FHARD_DISK_MODE[isohybrid
+from the syslinux project]:
+
+ % isohybrid grml_2009.10.iso
+///////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
+
+This allows you to dd the Grml ISO to your USB device (use for example
+link:http://www.chrysocome.net/rawwrite[rawwrite] if you've just a Windows
+system available) running:
+
+ % dd if=grml_2013.01.iso of=/dev/sdX
+
+where /dev/sdX is your USB device. Of course this doesn't provide such a
+flexible system like with grml2usb (no multi-ISO setup, no additional default
+bootoptions,...) but it's a nice way to get a working USB boot setup if you
+don't have grml2usb available.
+
+[[grml2usb-vs-dd]]
+What's the difference between grml2usb and just using dd?
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
+
+grml2usb does not remove any data from your USB device and does not alter the
+partition table at all. grml2usb provides multi-ISO support, support for adding
+default bootoptions and selecting the bootloader (syslinux vs. grub) without
+having to manually touch the ISO at all.
+
+[[grml2iso]]
+What's grml2iso?
+~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~