[user-guide] Move notes up in usb creation to make itemlist easier to read. It looked like something was missing

Susan Lauber laubersm at fedoraproject.org
Fri Oct 15 20:19:03 UTC 2010


commit d2ae27a4d6ce17e31a73a82c9975b4be14c04c84
Author: Susan Lauber <laubersm at fedoraproject.org>
Date:   Fri Oct 15 11:12:40 2010 -0400

    Move notes up in usb creation to make itemlist easier to read. It looked like something was missing until I triple checked it.

 en-US/Media.xml |    6 +++---
 1 files changed, 3 insertions(+), 3 deletions(-)
---
diff --git a/en-US/Media.xml b/en-US/Media.xml
index 63e323e..6c7919f 100644
--- a/en-US/Media.xml
+++ b/en-US/Media.xml
@@ -170,9 +170,6 @@ When you are ready to burn your CD/DVD, select the image or media at the bottom
 					<para>
 						a USB media device with at least 1&nbsp;GB of free space on it. USB media often comes in the form of flash devices sometimes called pen drives, thumb disks, or keys; or as an externally connected hard disk device. Almost all media of this type is formatted as a vfat file system. You can create bootable USB media on media formatted as ext2, ext3, or vfat.
 					</para>
-					<para>
-						The Fedora installation will occupy around 1&nbsp;GB. Beyond this, you might want to allocate space for Fedora to store files such as documents or software installations. These documents and programs will be available to you every time you start a computer with this USB media device, since they are stored on the device itself and not on the computer to which it is attached. This feature is a major advantage of running Fedora from Live USB media rather than from a Live CD.
-					</para>
 					<note>
 						<title>USB Image Writing is Non-destructive</title>
 						<para>
@@ -185,6 +182,9 @@ When you are ready to burn your CD/DVD, select the image or media at the bottom
 							In a few cases with oddly formatted or partitioned USB media, the image writing may fail.
 						</para>
 					</note>
+					<para>
+						The Fedora installation will occupy around 1&nbsp;GB. Beyond this, you might want to allocate space for Fedora to store files such as documents or software installations. These documents and programs will be available to you every time you start a computer with this USB media device, since they are stored on the device itself and not on the computer to which it is attached. This feature is a major advantage of running Fedora from Live USB media rather than from a Live CD.
+					</para>
 				</listitem>
 				<listitem>
 					<para>


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