What’s more, Ventoy can be updated non-destructively, meaning you can update the Ventoy software on the same (existing) USB flash drive, no need to keep re-creating the bootable drive with each update. Then, when you boot from the Ventoy flash drive, you’ll be presented with a list of the ISOs, simply select which ISO to load, and… voilà. Once you have created the Ventoy multi-boot USB flash drive, which is very straightforward, you simply drag and drop your ISOs into the main partition. Ventoy achieves this by creating a separate, very small, hidden boot partition that also holds files that act an an interface with the main partition. However, with Ventoy you can place all three distros on a single USB flash drive. With Rufus, you would need to create three separate bootable flash drives, one for each distro. For example, say you had three Linux distros you wanted to check out via live bootable media. With Rufus, you can only create one bootable flash drive per ISO but by using Ventoy you can load multiple ISOs onto a single flash drive only limited by the capacity of the flash drive. Most of you would be familiar with Rufus, the popular bootable USB flash drive creator, and Ventoy is like Rufus on steroids. Ventoy, a free and open-source multi-boot USB flash drive creator, is one relatively new freeware release that has managed to reinvent the wheel. These days, of course, sandboxing has become a well-known and popular security mechanism. I remember, many moons ago when Sandboxie was first released and terms such as “sandbox” and “isolation technique” were akin to a foreign language for many. It’s been quite some time since a new and innovative freeware program has been released.
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