In my case, I used a 16gb drive I partitioned in this way: – Using a linux installation or live session and Gparted (or any other partitioning tool), create 3 partitions on your usb drive. – First of all, you must disable Secure Boot from UEFI BIOS, since Kali lacks the needed signature to let it boot with this setting on. In this guide, I will share with you the steps I took, not only to start Kali Linux live under UEFI from usb drive, but also to make it persistent, while still being able to use (part of) it as a normal usb drive in Windows. Luckily, you can still boot it on a UEFI system, but you’ll need to get your hands a little bit dirty. It could be a problem if you can’t or don’t want to switch to BIOS legacy boot. It seems that the latest (2016.1) Kali Linux (and its base distro, Debian) doesn’t support UEFI when booted in live mode out of the box.
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