I absolutely love ventoy. I recommend it to all my friends. Usually they say "I already know how to create a multiboot flash drive." And then they try it and say "thank you, that's awesome!"
@@MR-nl8xr LMDE was not supported for a while, as it was written in the release notes or something. I think it was fixed later, but I'm not sure. I also encountered strange behavior on some computers (especially very old ones), but in most cases it works fine. Strange behavior can be caused by bad locks somewhere in the middle of the bootable media. I've encountered this problem (oh, those extremely cheap Chinese SSDs...)
I love Ventoy. I used to have too few flash drives and would find myself imaging the same drive with image A only to overwrite with image B, and then sometime later overwrite again with image A. Now I keep an external SSD with all my favorite distros and bootable tools like Clonezilla. I even have a Windows ISO on it. It's got everything I need, and I don't have to worry much about overwriting it or running out of space.
Yup same here. And somehow I still end up using and stuffing all my flash drives lol. There’s something nice and reassuring about knowing that (as long you encrypt) even if you lose it or it gets stolen… you’re not out a whole SSD, the big bucks(to me), and can still rest easy with the loss.
I love Ventoy too. I dedicated one of my internal hard drives to ventoy and reserved some space at the back of that HD. Then I created a standard ESP partition right behind the Ventoy efi partition. So the ISOs go on to the first partition, 2nd partition is the Ventoy EFi, 3rd is a standard ESP, On the remaining part of the HDD I can do whatever I want. Create more partitions and install multiboot systems using the ISOs from the first partition as an installation media. It's up to me where I boot from. Either from Ventoy or one of my installed systems. Multiple linux and or windows. This hdd became a very flexible test playground. I don"t even use flash drives unless I need something portable. I did the same thing with an external USB HDD too. Ventoy ISO's. Ventoy EFI, standard ESP, then multiple running system and simple storage partitions. And it's portable.
I like the idea. I have SSD with 1TB. Can you share the steps, pls? I am a newbie. Btw, just using Orange Pi 4 and already Armbian Linux installed on it. Is there any way I can use it without overwriting it?😊
I use my Ventoy USB every week when I do backups of my OS drive using Clonezilla. There are also several ISO images of the few distros I play around with and several diagnostic tools or system recovery tools as well. Lastly if you're like me and do tech support for friends and family then you're going to also have some Windows tools and malware scanning ISOs too.
My thoughts, when I watched the video, thanks for posting ! I've never heard of it, got it downloaded and running on a new 128GB Scandisk. I may use this to replace my virtual linux installs. It will certainly contain tools as you mention. I've saved tools for decades, have many and never had a single repository.
Bonjour , perhaps you have to try Rescuezilla which has a better GUI than Clonezilla 😂… I use it to clone my Pop OS,Zorin Os and W11 PC .. I clone also with Macrium . In case of difficulties with the graphic driver try the fallback graphic mode..
I have been using Ventoy for several years. It's the easiest way to keep all the ISOs in one place and makes installation simple. Also eliminates the need for a USB copy program like dd.
Under the category of "Do you even remember..." I would like to submit the Iomega SuperDisk. SuperDisks were around when the Zip Drive was the cool thing to have. They supported 120MB of storage, and were the same form factor as the 3.5" floppy. A lot of computers shipped with them, but almost no one ever knew that they had a SuperDisk drive.
That's an awesome tool to learn about. I had no idea that this existed, although I thought about developing it myself. I knew that it could be done. Now I can make a flash drive with this software and study its contents. Nice... 🙂
@@msor6108 I'm not clear whether this enigmatic response means "you call persistence a 'key feature' but I regard it as purely decorative" or is it an injunction to "tell me more about persistence because I can't be bothered to visit the Ventoy site to find out".
Non persistent cannot be traced back to you once you turn the machine off... i.e. using Kali to do some, uh., research only stuff... or perhaps visiting dark web sites. For both of these case scenarios, persistence would endanger you or your equipment.
thanks, will save a lot of time when you are constantly deleting and creating new installation usb. Now you save a lot of time just plug in and use. So fun to be able to watch your video and learn new things that make everyday life easier.
Couple of hours ago I downloaded my 15th distro to try out with Ventoy :) PopOS is great, but does not wake after deep sleep and I need to find another favorite. Too bad, because the tiling options is great especially when working with multiple monitors. Great video as always.
Regardless of your use case, Ventoy is awesome even if you only use it to load an OS once in while... much quicker and easier to just copy an ISO to the stick than to try and correctly create a live USB stick bootable install.
Sad to say I have seen the hole evolution from tape drive storage to today storage media as well. Lol Never got into the Jazdrive but I did use zipdisk. Then there was the CD's, DVD's and now Usb disks. I remember reading something years ago that Usb will never be a thing and floppy disks will be around forever. Well that was wrong... Lol I almost fell out of my chair laughing so hard when you pulled out that basket of usb drives Jay... 🤣 Then you pulled out my label maker maker as well, feels like you were using my office as props for your video... 😄🤣 I started using Ventoy as well it is a awesome utility tool to be sure. Thanks for the video Jay. LLAP 🖖 P.S. I have lots more junk for props... 🤪
A few things you didn't mention: Ventoy has separate x86 and x64 executables in the download but it's supposed to detect your system and launch the proper executable. It often doesn't do this as evidenced by your video as it launched the 32-bit x86 version on a 64-bit Windows install. If Windows is booting from an MBR/CSM configured system, this could explain the auto detect problem. Also, Ventoy itself shows if it's booting in either BIOS/CSM Mode or UEFI Mode in the lower left corner of its GUI so people have to keep that in mind, especially when trying to install Windows 11 - it doesn't support CSM Mode so users gotta make sure thier Ventoy stick was created from the x64 executable from a Windows system in UEFI Mode with Secure Boot enabled to ensure the Windows 11 installer behaves. Ventoy also supports Secure Boot and it's MOK manager can be enrolled so that it'll boot in UEFI Mode with Secure Boot enabled. This is perfect for systems that already have Secure Boot, Resizable BAR, and fTPM all enabled in their UEFI so their Windows 11 installs go smoothly as well as Fedora and OpenSuse as they support Secure Boot, too. Lastly, when installing Linux from Ventoy, the Calamares installer will often add the Ventoy stick into the update sources as a repo. This will cause errors when downloading Linux updates because the Ventoy stick is most likely removed (and offline 😝) at this point, but it's a simple enough fix just to remove it from the update sources.
Oh yeah. I have used jazz disk drives before and I thought it was the final say in "large capacity portable media"🤣. Actually, I have used just about every kind of floppy ever commercially available. Floppies that resembled an LP vinyl album sleeve. Commodore/amiga tapes, reel tapes and a lot of others and with each I thought the industry had hit the ceiling on capacity. Funny how things turn out...Great video!!
Hi, the ISO file does not keep the installed extensions or something else, after rebooting it again everything is gone. Is there any sulution for that?
Worrying know and used all the hardware types but never heard of ventoy but know what I will be downloading at work tomorrow. Thanks for the great suggestion
Thank you for the detailed instruction. I was interested in this, but had no idea how to go about setting it up. I love Linux, but I'm every bit the novice as I'm not in a " need to use my computer everyday" sort of lifestyle. Even when I do pick up a few things, I quickly forget because it may be months (if ever) before I need to repeat a process outside of very basic use.
I actually still have a Jaz drive a a number of disks somewhere in the house (no idea if it works though 😆). Nice video - I hadn't yet heard of Ventoy, and I wanted to see a video from a trusted resource to learn more about it.
Hi Jay, I did have to chuckle a little when you said "My career" and you show the Commodore 64 cassette 🙂... I started the same way, WAY BACK in the day and love doing computer projects where others say "it can't be done" 🤣. Now as we move on with our experimental systems and home labs, questions do arise. I am an avid watcher of your learn Linux classes and other topics that you bring out. Even an old Network, computer, and programming engineer like me can learn something new as I did in your courses ("Great job + 5 stars earned"). After setting up two Truenas Core systems on "Normal" MSI mainboards, the question came up about creating system SSD images of the Truenas system disk (SSD) so as to be prepared in case of an emergency. That's where Ventoy came in, which worked like a charm using clonezilla-live-lunar-amd64. Using a Seagate external 2 Tb USB PS4 game drive as the ext4 destination and naturally your pointers, the Image for the Truenas system was created with absolutely no errors and later copied to a secure external fileserver. Actually I'm somewhat surprised at how easy it was to create the Image of the Truenas system. A 5 star review for Learn Linux TV. Keep up the good work!
Yes, I remember the Jazz Drive. I never used it because I prefered the LS120 SuperDisk. Do you remember those? The size of a standard 3.5" floppy and 120MB in a super fast disk. I put them in all of my computers and in the PCs of many other people where I worked as the IT Director. They basically replaced floppies for us. Also, Tom was wrong when he said "best." I think Ventory might be able to garner easiest, but best has to go to Easy2Boot.
Very interesting. I suspect there are more features this project concept provides. For instance, Is it possible to create an ISO from a current install, copy to ventoy pendrive, and then boot from it?
Awesome, I have been using YUMI. The problem with it is that you have to run the program to add new images to the flash drive. I will definitely be switching to Ventoy.
I started with the Radio Shack Color Computer. Its tape drive actually read programs faster than the original Commodore disk drive! However, one had to keep track of the place on the tape where a specific program was! If you didn't zero out your tape counter, and start the tape from the beginning ... well, a lot of wasted time searching! So there's that!
I have a question, since I'm a bit confused. Idk if I'm not paying attention, or if it's not clear in the video, but are you running the distros straight from the USB drive as in live boot? Or are you running the installer and went through the full installation process but didn't show it in the video? From the video it looks like you're running it live without having to install any distros. Also, what do you mean by saying that not every single distribution image is bootable?
I have Avira Rescue System, Clonzilla, Eset System Rescue, Hiren Boot CD, Kaspersky Rescue, memtest86 (also Clonezilla includes it), Network SEcurity Toolkit, ShredOS, and Super Grub2 Disk.
Does Ventoy have a type of persistence for the .iso files? Meaning if I run the Ubuntu .iso, then run update/full-upgrade, will those changes remain? Or will they be lost after removing the USB?
Yep, same here. I even think that I've seen older stuff than you do, like punch cards 😋 I've tried Ventoy 6 or 7 times that last 1 year or so and I always have problems with booting into Vanilla Arch UEFI, BIOS is OK, but not UEFI, donno why. Last time was about 5 months ago. Good that it works for you though.
With Windows OSes they are already making it so you have to jump to the next new OS like every what 2 years now? Something like that. Already the next one will end in 2024. Are the Linux OSes going to be around long term? Like if I put Mint or something on my computer, will I be able to stay on that OS for 5+ years without being forced to something else? Thanks.
Does the Ventoy USB thumbdrive contain the ISOs of all the OSes on its option list? Can I use rEFInd to dual boot Windows 11 with ChromeFlex? If so, how do I put the ChromeFlex ISO onto the Ventoy flash drive?
Is there any trustworthy entity that can vouch that this app is safe? I couldn't even find the source code. Is it closed-sourced? If so, should we be installing OSes on our devices with this, blindly?
I have installed fedora in my laptop. And when i turn the screen in locked for a while or suspended. After all that happen when i turn on the screen, unfortunately turns black with no cursor. And i have to forcely shutdown and boot again. Does this method fix my problem? Anyone?
I absolutely love ventoy. I recommend it to all my friends. Usually they say "I already know how to create a multiboot flash drive." And then they try it and say "thank you, that's awesome!"
I dont understand ow everyone is so in love with it.
i am having such a hard time trying just to get it work for one Linux LMDE iso load.
@@MR-nl8xr LMDE was not supported for a while, as it was written in the release notes or something. I think it was fixed later, but I'm not sure. I also encountered strange behavior on some computers (especially very old ones), but in most cases it works fine.
Strange behavior can be caused by bad locks somewhere in the middle of the bootable media. I've encountered this problem (oh, those extremely cheap Chinese SSDs...)
I love Ventoy. I used to have too few flash drives and would find myself imaging the same drive with image A only to overwrite with image B, and then sometime later overwrite again with image A. Now I keep an external SSD with all my favorite distros and bootable tools like Clonezilla. I even have a Windows ISO on it. It's got everything I need, and I don't have to worry much about overwriting it or running out of space.
Yup same here. And somehow I still end up using and stuffing all my flash drives lol.
There’s something nice and reassuring about knowing that (as long you encrypt) even if you lose it or it gets stolen… you’re not out a whole SSD, the big bucks(to me), and can still rest easy with the loss.
I love Ventoy too. I dedicated one of my internal hard drives to ventoy and reserved some space at the back of that HD. Then I created a standard ESP partition right behind the Ventoy efi partition. So the ISOs go on to the first partition, 2nd partition is the Ventoy EFi, 3rd is a standard ESP, On the remaining part of the HDD I can do whatever I want. Create more partitions and install multiboot systems using the ISOs from the first partition as an installation media. It's up to me where I boot from. Either from Ventoy or one of my installed systems. Multiple linux and or windows. This hdd became a very flexible test playground. I don"t even use flash drives unless I need something portable.
I did the same thing with an external USB HDD too. Ventoy ISO's. Ventoy EFI, standard ESP, then multiple running system and simple storage partitions. And it's portable.
I like the idea. I have SSD with 1TB. Can you share the steps, pls? I am a newbie. Btw, just using Orange Pi 4 and already Armbian Linux installed on it. Is there any way I can use it without overwriting it?😊
I use my Ventoy USB every week when I do backups of my OS drive using Clonezilla. There are also several ISO images of the few distros I play around with and several diagnostic tools or system recovery tools as well. Lastly if you're like me and do tech support for friends and family then you're going to also have some Windows tools and malware scanning ISOs too.
My thoughts, when I watched the video, thanks for posting !
I've never heard of it, got it downloaded and running on a new 128GB Scandisk.
I may use this to replace my virtual linux installs.
It will certainly contain tools as you mention. I've saved tools for decades, have many and never had a single repository.
Bonjour , perhaps you have to try Rescuezilla which has a better GUI than Clonezilla 😂… I use it to clone my Pop OS,Zorin Os and W11 PC .. I clone also with Macrium . In case of difficulties with the graphic driver try the fallback graphic mode..
@@gh2r32vgrf I use Macrium as well, it is terrific at data / drive management, certainly worth paying for in my view.
I have been using Ventoy for several years. It's the easiest way to keep all the ISOs in one place and makes installation simple. Also eliminates the need for a USB copy program like dd.
Under the category of "Do you even remember..." I would like to submit the Iomega SuperDisk. SuperDisks were around when the Zip Drive was the cool thing to have. They supported 120MB of storage, and were the same form factor as the 3.5" floppy. A lot of computers shipped with them, but almost no one ever knew that they had a SuperDisk drive.
And nobody sold blank media...
Starts at 6:57
Thanks
You rock!
That's an awesome tool to learn about. I had no idea that this existed, although I thought about developing it myself. I knew that it could be done. Now I can make a flash drive with this software and study its contents. Nice... 🙂
Ventoy was a lifesaver for me, I used to format my flash drive every time I wanted a new OS.
Thank you for making this! Just started using Ventoy today.
My brother used to work at iOmega, and I remember him bringing home ZIP drives and JAZ drives for us to mess with. Wow, how time has flown.
ventoy is plain awesome! i like the new musical curtains of lltv! greetings from buenos aires!
I did not know about Ventoy. Cool. Thanks.
You're welcome!
But why skip the key feature of Ventoy -- the ability to add persistence?
Elaborate
@@msor6108 I'm not clear whether this enigmatic response means "you call persistence a 'key feature' but I regard it as purely decorative" or is it an injunction to "tell me more about persistence because I can't be bothered to visit the Ventoy site to find out".
Non persistent cannot be traced back to you once you turn the machine off... i.e. using Kali to do some, uh., research only stuff... or perhaps visiting dark web sites. For both of these case scenarios, persistence would endanger you or your equipment.
Me: "Hey Jay, what distro should I keep with me on a USB drive?"
Jay: "All of them!"
HAHA! Great video, Jay! Keep them coming!
this episode is awesome. still I insist you should mention the "vDisk boot Plugin" and "Vhdboot plugin" maybe next time. that's the gem of ventoy !!!
thanks, will save a lot of time when you are constantly deleting and creating new installation usb. Now you save a lot of time just plug in and use. So fun to be able to watch your video and learn new things that make everyday life easier.
Couple of hours ago I downloaded my 15th distro to try out with Ventoy :) PopOS is great, but does not wake after deep sleep and I need to find another favorite. Too bad, because the tiling options is great especially when working with multiple monitors. Great video as always.
I am also getting the deep sleep issue from like 2 months, searching for a new one to switch.
Regardless of your use case, Ventoy is awesome even if you only use it to load an OS once in while... much quicker and easier to just copy an ISO to the stick than to try and correctly create a live USB stick bootable install.
Sad to say I have seen the hole evolution from tape drive storage to today storage media as well. Lol
Never got into the Jazdrive but I did use zipdisk. Then there was the CD's, DVD's and now Usb disks. I remember reading something years ago that Usb will never be a thing and floppy disks will be around forever. Well that was wrong... Lol
I almost fell out of my chair laughing so hard when you pulled out that basket of usb drives Jay... 🤣
Then you pulled out my label maker maker as well, feels like you were using my office as props for your video... 😄🤣
I started using Ventoy as well it is a awesome utility tool to be sure.
Thanks for the video Jay.
LLAP 🖖
P.S. I have lots more junk for props... 🤪
Thanks for sharing Jay, Ventoy is great and I use it for my distro's and as a toolkit.
I've been using Ventoy for over a year now and it's become absolutely indispensable to me.
Ventoy is so awesome!
A few things you didn't mention: Ventoy has separate x86 and x64 executables in the download but it's supposed to detect your system and launch the proper executable. It often doesn't do this as evidenced by your video as it launched the 32-bit x86 version on a 64-bit Windows install. If Windows is booting from an MBR/CSM configured system, this could explain the auto detect problem. Also, Ventoy itself shows if it's booting in either BIOS/CSM Mode or UEFI Mode in the lower left corner of its GUI so people have to keep that in mind, especially when trying to install Windows 11 - it doesn't support CSM Mode so users gotta make sure thier Ventoy stick was created from the x64 executable from a Windows system in UEFI Mode with Secure Boot enabled to ensure the Windows 11 installer behaves. Ventoy also supports Secure Boot and it's MOK manager can be enrolled so that it'll boot in UEFI Mode with Secure Boot enabled. This is perfect for systems that already have Secure Boot, Resizable BAR, and fTPM all enabled in their UEFI so their Windows 11 installs go smoothly as well as Fedora and OpenSuse as they support Secure Boot, too. Lastly, when installing Linux from Ventoy, the Calamares installer will often add the Ventoy stick into the update sources as a repo. This will cause errors when downloading Linux updates because the Ventoy stick is most likely removed (and offline 😝) at this point, but it's a simple enough fix just to remove it from the update sources.
Oh yeah. I have used jazz disk drives before and I thought it was the final say in "large capacity portable media"🤣. Actually, I have used just about every kind of floppy ever commercially available. Floppies that resembled an LP vinyl album sleeve. Commodore/amiga tapes, reel tapes and a lot of others and with each I thought the industry had hit the ceiling on capacity. Funny how things turn out...Great video!!
Hi, the ISO file does not keep the installed extensions or something else, after rebooting it again everything is gone. Is there any sulution for that?
Worrying know and used all the hardware types but never heard of ventoy but know what I will be downloading at work tomorrow. Thanks for the great suggestion
Ventoy will mark computing as knoppix did with the first live CD !
Ventoy marquera l'informatique comme l'a fait knoppix avec le premier CD live !
Thank you for the detailed instruction. I was interested in this, but had no idea how to go about setting it up. I love Linux, but I'm every bit the novice as I'm not in a " need to use my computer everyday" sort of lifestyle. Even when I do pick up a few things, I quickly forget because it may be months (if ever) before I need to repeat a process outside of very basic use.
You download the utility onto a computer and then use it to setup the usb drive. Then you copy over all iso files you want to be on it.
Jazz SCSI drive for my Amiga 2000 and 3000 was AWESOME!
I actually still have a Jaz drive a a number of disks somewhere in the house (no idea if it works though 😆). Nice video - I hadn't yet heard of Ventoy, and I wanted to see a video from a trusted resource to learn more about it.
Literally just what I was thinking about
Thank you for your video and for this tools
Thanx for the video. I use an external USB3 SSD harddisk. Works well.
Ventoy is just wow , this was something I always wanted t make my work flow fluent
Okay, I am idiot how did you install it I am trying to get to where you were at at the ventoy wizard but nothing is working for me.
Hi Jay,
I did have to chuckle a little when you said "My career" and you show the Commodore 64 cassette 🙂...
I started the same way, WAY BACK in the day and love doing computer projects where others say "it can't be done" 🤣.
Now as we move on with our experimental systems and home labs, questions do arise.
I am an avid watcher of your learn Linux classes and other topics that you bring out.
Even an old Network, computer, and programming engineer like me can learn something new as I did in your courses ("Great job + 5 stars earned").
After setting up two Truenas Core systems on "Normal" MSI mainboards, the question came up about creating system SSD images of the Truenas system disk (SSD) so as to be prepared in case of an emergency.
That's where Ventoy came in, which worked like a charm using clonezilla-live-lunar-amd64.
Using a Seagate external 2 Tb USB PS4 game drive as the ext4 destination and naturally your pointers, the Image for the Truenas system was created with absolutely no errors and later copied to a secure external fileserver.
Actually I'm somewhat surprised at how easy it was to create the Image of the Truenas system.
A 5 star review for Learn Linux TV.
Keep up the good work!
love me some Ventoy!!!! Great video
Yes, I remember the Jazz Drive. I never used it because I prefered the LS120 SuperDisk. Do you remember those? The size of a standard 3.5" floppy and 120MB in a super fast disk. I put them in all of my computers and in the PCs of many other people where I worked as the IT Director. They basically replaced floppies for us.
Also, Tom was wrong when he said "best." I think Ventory might be able to garner easiest, but best has to go to Easy2Boot.
Very interesting. I suspect there are more features this project concept provides. For instance, Is it possible to create an ISO from a current install, copy to ventoy pendrive, and then boot from it?
thank you jay, very cool :)
Awesome, I have been using YUMI. The problem with it is that you have to run the program to add new images to the flash drive. I will definitely be switching to Ventoy.
How did you mass install all those iso ?? Did you have to build it one at a time, or did you do it in mass somehow?
Ventoy is amazing!
I guess I am a dummy,how do you run the tool in linux?
Used Ventoy recently to try out a few distros on a multi-boot system (bare metal). Handy having multiple isos in once place
Thanks for the hard work, great video, BTW I still have a working IOMEGA Jazz unit but have to use a virtual computer to get it to work properly
Great tool. Thanks for sharing!
Jay, did you have to download each Distro individually from Distrowatch?
Be good to have a video about the ventoy plug-ins too
ventoy is a must, kind of surprised you are only covering it now tbh
I started with the Radio Shack Color Computer. Its tape drive actually read programs faster than the original Commodore disk drive! However, one had to keep track of the place on the tape where a specific program was! If you didn't zero out your tape counter, and start the tape from the beginning ... well, a lot of wasted time searching! So there's that!
I started with drum and tape storage and ferrite core ram... 😁
I forgot to mention that I also used the network to directly send the NAS Image to another NAS Samba share which was SUPER EASY.
I have a question, since I'm a bit confused. Idk if I'm not paying attention, or if it's not clear in the video, but are you running the distros straight from the USB drive as in live boot? Or are you running the installer and went through the full installation process but didn't show it in the video?
From the video it looks like you're running it live without having to install any distros.
Also, what do you mean by saying that not every single distribution image is bootable?
I highly appreciate your time and work for all of your video tutorials.
So, May I ask you why you chose MBR type partition over the GPT type?
Thanks
The flash drive isn't large enough for that to matter.
what test, diagnose, bench and rescue ISOs you guys use?
erm.... hirens bootcd or other based on it
I have Avira Rescue System, Clonzilla, Eset System Rescue, Hiren Boot CD, Kaspersky Rescue, memtest86 (also Clonezilla includes it), Network SEcurity Toolkit, ShredOS, and Super Grub2 Disk.
@@HaroldCrews thanks!
did you run a command to download every distro or did you manually click to download.
Do have any knowledge on putting batocera on ventoy
is freebsd working on your ventoy >?
Very useful tool indeed.
I have a very tiny USB keychain flash drive that has Ventoy on it with several ISO images. It is on my keychain wherever I go.
Thank you ❤
Is there a one stop place where i can download all the linux distros?
Can ventoy also be used for external ssds or ssds in USB cases? Or does it only Support USB drives?😅
I can't get Fedora or Bazzite to work off of Ventoy. Any tips?
Can we copy linux , windows and other kind of iso like proxmox all in a single flash memory?
Yes
I didn't know you could update it. gonna do that now.
Does Ventoy have a type of persistence for the .iso files? Meaning if I run the Ubuntu .iso, then run update/full-upgrade, will those changes remain? Or will they be lost after removing the USB?
Love Ventoy
Yep, same here. I even think that I've seen older stuff than you do, like punch cards 😋
I've tried Ventoy 6 or 7 times that last 1 year or so and I always have problems with booting into Vanilla Arch UEFI, BIOS is OK, but not UEFI, donno why. Last time was about 5 months ago.
Good that it works for you though.
@LearnLinuxTV there is no Mac OS version available. There are only three versions available: livecd, windows, and linux tar file.
Loved the Jaz drive, used it every day as portable source code (sneaker net) before git. Was pretty quick ala SCSI.
One Drive to rule them all 🙏💍🧝🏻♀️🧙🏼♂️
You have links & a description galore... Why no direct link to Ventoy
🤣🤣🤣 Thank you. I started to use Ventoy
is FL Studio an iso file that can be added?
How do I REMOVE a distro? Deleting the entry leaves it in the Ventoy list -- and bootable.. Deleting the boot entry with efibootmgr does nothing
To add and remove distros you would typically add the iso file in your file manager and then you just delete the iso
I dont have windows/mac. How can i do in ubuntu?
You could spin up a virtual machine and run windows inside of that
Sorry for the late reply
With Windows OSes they are already making it so you have to jump to the next new OS like every what 2 years now? Something like that. Already the next one will end in 2024.
Are the Linux OSes going to be around long term? Like if I put Mint or something on my computer, will I be able to stay on that OS for 5+ years without being forced to something else? Thanks.
Vanilla OS doesn't work on ventoy for some reason... the stable wont boot up while the beta version have an error during install
Already using this ventoy since 2019
It's great for installing all those windows editions too
Thanks a lot for this! :-)
this is the start of Jay running Hannah Montana Linux as daily driver
The tool I've been missing :)
Does the Ventoy USB thumbdrive contain the ISOs of all the OSes on its option list?
Can I use rEFInd to dual boot Windows 11 with ChromeFlex? If so, how do I put the ChromeFlex ISO onto the Ventoy flash drive?
Can we also add iso images for xcp-ng and proxmox ?
Not only do I remember Iomega Jazz drives..I've used them as a bootable OS for early Macs..for diagnostic uses.
Some ISO won't boot or don't work with Ventoy.
how much space does every DistroWatch iso take up on your drive?
How can I save my work & updates on the USB destrib. ? It's not practical to update and repeat everything every time I reboot or some...
.. ?! 😓🤔
Theyre live images not installs. Youre nit meant to worknin them....
Thanks
link to tom's video?
I cant find a Ventoy download for mac os.
I'm not seeing it either.
Is there any trustworthy entity that can vouch that this app is safe? I couldn't even find the source code. Is it closed-sourced? If so, should we be installing OSes on our devices with this, blindly?
I'm not sure where you looked, as the first response of a Google search, is the Github page.
Does ventoy work with secure boot? Do I have to configure the secure boot to make ventoy work?
just discovered this.. and it's been filled with ISO images 😀
I have installed fedora in my laptop. And when i turn the screen in locked for a while or suspended. After all that happen when i turn on the screen, unfortunately turns black with no cursor. And i have to forcely shutdown and boot again. Does this method fix my problem? Anyone?
yes, I used both Zip and Jaz drives