10-23-2017, 09:07 PM
(10-23-2017, 08:37 PM)br1anstorm link Wrote: This has become a really interesting thread, with some useful insights and information. We seem to have a shortlist of three: Etcher, Rufus, and Linux Lite's inbuilt image-writing option as described by torreydale. (Incidentally I think Linux Mint has a similar inbuilt USB image-creator option).All seem to be rated highly.... I'll just have to try them!
Just one further and possibly dumb question. Am I correct in believing that with any of these, the deal is one USB stick, one ISO image? In other words, when writing an ISO image on to a USB stick to create a bootable USB with any of these programs, the program - after formatting - only puts one ISO image (equivalent to one Live CD/DVD) on to the USB stick, and any remaining space on the stick is invisible/inaccessible/unusable?
If that is so, it seems to be an argument for using a USB stick which is fairly small.... and if you want to have more than one distro available for installation, you have one USB stick for each?
Otherwise I guess if you want several distros (ISOs) on a single - larger - USB stick, you have to look at YUMI?
Peppermint has an inbuilt tool as well. For creating multiboot USB sticks Yumi is certainly one option. There are a few others; MultibootUSB a cross platform software written in python which allows you to install multiple live linux on a USB disk non destructively and option to uninstall distros. There's also Sardu which appears to work only for creating Windows bootable sticks, I tried it once, not exactly user-friendly as far as I can remember. So yes, whether you use Etcher, Rufus and/or I believe inbuilt options as well is 1 USB stick = 1 .ISO burnt.
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