I was using the SuperSpeed port on the Xbox and the flash drive I was using was a Sandisk USB 2.0 drive (didn't have any USB 3.0 drives available). There has to be some kind of bug that is preventing this from working as expected. The Xbox also picked up the flash drive from the unpowered USB hub as well. (Flash drive, keyboard, and printer -> USB 3.0 HUB -> Xbox). I was curious if the PiKVM emulated a USB hub (after all, it has to send keyboard, mouse, drive all via one cable), so I repeated the same experiment using an unpowered USB 3.0 hub. The system picked up the physical flash drive just fine and lit up the Offline Update option - so, it wasn't a malformed image. I assumed that may have screwed up the image when I was making it, but I went ahead and cloned the crafted image onto an actual flash drive and plugged it into the system. Unfortunately, the Offline Update option never lit up. So, I made an Xbox OSU (restore) drive image using fdisk/mkfs.ntfs and attempted to attach it to an Xbox in recovery mode. Of course, the PiKVM is no-brainer when it comes to computers, but I was curious to see if it would work on an Xbox - I do a lot of HDD replacements on these machine (and PS4 as well).
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