Raymond - Cc-How To Make A USB Flash Drive Bootable
Raymond - Cc-How To Make A USB Flash Drive Bootable
Raymond - Cc-How To Make A USB Flash Drive Bootable
raymond.cc/blog/how-to-make-a-usb-flash-drive-bootable/
Although CDs and DVDs aren’t as important as they were several years ago, they’re still a
very important solution for installing operating systems, running offline malware scans,
system repairs, installing software, password resets and etc.
Because USB storage media is very portable, cheap and mostly faster than an optical drive
for installing software, running live operating systems and many other things, it makes
sense to use a flash drive where possible to take over tasks where a CD/DVD or even
floppy disk used to be the only solution. Once you know what to use, it’s very easy to
transfer bootable optical disks or floppies onto USB to accomplish the tasks you need more
efficiently.
Here we show the the easiest ways to transfer floppy or optical boot media onto USB with
the minimum of effort.
Download BootDisk2BootStick
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Create a Bootable DOS USB Flash Drive
Creating a DOS bootable floppy disk is still very important if you need to flash the BIOS of
older computers because you usually need to run the flashing process from a DOS based
environment. Obviously the only way years back was to do this via floppy drive but now
you can use a USB flash drive instead which is a good deal easier.
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One small and portable tool we’ve
mentioned before is Rufus
because it’s equally at home
creating a Windows install or
WinPE USB as it is a Linux based
rescue disk or Live CD, something
many other tools are not that good
at. All you have to do is insert the
flash drive, launch Rufus and click
the image select button (arrowed)
to browse for the ISO you created
earlier. This will set the File system
for you so all you need to do is click
Start and let it go to work. Once
finished you can test the USB
before rebooting.
Download Rufus
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For example, in PowerISO you only need to go to the Tools menu > “Make CD/DVD/Blu-
ray Image File” to create a disk image from an optical disk, and then go to Tools > “Create
Bootable USB Drive” to write the image file to USB, as pictured above. The same can also
be done with floppy disk to USB conversion. PowerISO and UltraISO normally cost $29.95
but are worth considering if you perform a lot of ISO creating or ISO to USB related tasks.
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Another option which is far easier and doesn’t require you to enter the BIOS at all, is a boot
menu which allows you to select from a list of bootable devices . This has an added
advantage that the device you select for booting from the menu is temporary and will be
reset to the normal drive at the next reboot.
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