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Ubuntu Boot Screen

minutes
Windows 10
Mac OS X
ubuntu
Ubuntu 22.04
chrome OS
Chrome OS
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BSOD

How to use this Ubuntu Boot Screen Screen Simulator

This dashboard simulates ubuntu linux boot simulator screen in your browser. It mimics the system loading screens with pixel-perfect accuracy.

Customizations:

  • Completed percentage: Set what percentage the update should start showing. Once in fullscreen, it will simulate progress dynamically.
  • Auto Exit: Set the duration after which the fullscreen simulation will automatically close (default is 45 minutes).
  • Double Click Exit: Double click anywhere on the screen during the simulation to exit back to the tool page immediately.

About Ubuntu Boot Screen Tool

Published: Last Updated:

Run a realistic Ubuntu Linux boot simulator directly in your browser. Mimics the official canonical system startup sequence with loading dots.

Key Features

  • Aubergine background matching official Ubuntu branding.
  • Ubuntu wordmark logo and spinner dots loader animation.
  • Completely private client-side scripting.

How to Use the Tool

  1. Open the Ubuntu Boot Simulator page.
  2. Select your auto-exit timeout period.
  3. Click 'Full Screen' or double-click to start.
  4. Double-click or press 'Esc' to exit the simulation.

Core Benefits

  • Lightweight page footprint that loads instantly.
  • No downloads or installations required to run Linux screens.
  • Runs offline, ideal for remote pranks.

Common Use Cases

  • Pranking windows users by making them think they booted into Linux.
  • Using as a minimalist tech screensaver for multi-monitor setups.
  • Simulating Linux environments for tutorial video editors.

Pro Tips

  • Maximize your browser window first to get a realistic boot appearance.
  • Set the exit timer so the prank automatically resets when you want.

A fully client-side and free Ubuntu boot screensaver. Easy to use, highly accurate, and completely safe.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

It is a browser-based mockup of the Ubuntu Linux operating system boot loader screen. It shows the logo, brand name, and spinning progress dots.
Yes, it is completely free and safe. It runs inside the secure sandbox of your browser, without administrative access to your system.
Double-click anywhere on the display or press the 'Esc' key to quit the simulation instantly.
No. The simulator only runs visual animations and does not query or log details about your actual hardware.
Yes, once loaded, the assets remain in browser memory, letting you run the simulator completely offline.
No, this is only a visual simulator. It will not write files or install Linux onto your drive.
It works on Windows, macOS, ChromeOS, and mobile devices via standard web browsers.
Enter fullscreen mode (usually F11 on Windows) and hide browser panels to mimic a true boot startup.