Pohoda.Ide to urobiť aj v Linuxe cez viacero nástrojov som v tom jednom linku našiel celkom pekné vysvetlenie Sometimes a USB stick can get messed-up partition/fs info. You can often fix this quickly and easily from the command line in Linux by inserting the stick and using fdisk on it.
You need to be super-user (use ’su’ command, and you’ll need the super password, or use ’sudo’ — use ‘man sudo’ to learn more). Your stick will usually show up as ‘/dev/sda’ (or ‘/dev/sdb’, etc) because it’s considered a SCSI-type device (i.e. ’sda’ == ‘[s]csi [d]evice [a]‘). Use ‘man fdisk’ to learn how to use fdisk. Do not skip that step, unless you’re already an expert on fdisk (and if so, why are you even bothering to read this?)
BE CAREFUL, TAKE YOUR TIME, AND READ THE MANUAL if you aren’t 100% sure about each step. It’s easy to screw up (e.g. wipe your boot/root drive) if you’re careless, and no tears shall be shed for your negligence. As I provide only the clues, I disclaim any/all liabilities.
If you do it right, you’ll erase the existing partition(s) on the stick, then create a new Win95/FAT32 single partition. It should show up as ‘/dev/sda1′ (or ‘/dev/sdb1′, etc).
Then you’ll even be able to use ‘mkdosfs’ on it, to format it nicely, and when you pop it in under Windows — *bam* minty fresh disk!
Edit:Tým nástrojom som myslel hlavne Gparted alebo to ide urobiť aj v tvorcovy LiveUSB