Safely eject the USB and it is time to use this multiboot Linux USB. Here, I also copied ARM ISO files on it, and it boots the specified ISO flawlessly. Since the same Ventoy drive will boot on an Intel/AMD (x86) machine and also on an ARM (Raspberry Pi – provided that you use Raspberry Pi 4 UEFI Firmware Image) machine. So, here’s what my USB looks like with all the desired Linux ISOs copied on it. Try safely ejecting the USB instead of just plugging it out A USB disk with 16 GB or more (size vary as per the number of OS you want to use).A computer with active internet connection (to download Ventoy and the Linux ISOs).Here’s what you need to have to follow this tutorial: What you need to create the bootable USBs? Ventoy is available on Linux, Windows and ARM platforms like Raspberry Pi. Of course, your USB disk should have enough space to accommodate all the Linux distributions you want. Pretty cool because it allows you to have multiple operating systems on one USB disk. This means, you create a Ventoy disk once and then all you have to do is update the ISO files like a normal USB stick. When you use Ventoy, it makes a tiny bootable EFI partition on your USB drive and gives you the remaining space to simply copy ISO files to it. When you create a bootable drive in the traditional way – by using a tool like Rufus, Etcher or dd on Linux, the drive only boots that particular distribution. Ventoy is a “tiny OS” that boots your ISO. Ventoy: The swiss army knife for creating bootable USBs In this tutorial, I’ll show you how to create multi boot USB. What if I told you can use multiple Linux on a single USB? Yes! That’s totally possible. You want to use another distribution, you have to format the USB and burn the other distribution on it. Usually, you put one Linux distribution on a single USB stick. If you like the distribution, you can then choose to install it. You probably already know that you can create a live USB of a Linux distribution and try it on any system without installing it. Brief: This tutorial shows the steps you can take to create a live USB stick that allows you to boot into more than Linux distributions without needing to re-image the drive.
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