: Select the checkbox for the OS you want to add (e.g., Windows Vista/7/8/10/11) and browse to its ISO file.
Easily adds various Linux ISOs (Ubuntu, Debian, Fedora) and rescue disks.
Elias plugged it into his diagnostic laptop. The autoplay window popped up. It wasn’t a flashy, modern interface. It was a utilitarian, almost retro list of files. But Elias knew what this was. WinSetupFromUSB wasn’t just a writer; it was a bootloader chameleon. It could handle Windows 2000, XP, Vista, 7, 8, 10, and Linux distros all on the same stick, utilizing Grub4Dos to manage the chaotic partition tables that modern tools refused to touch.
WinSetupFromUSB supports virtually every Windows version: from to Vista, 7, 8, 10, and Windows 11 . It also handles Windows Server 2008/2012, BartPE, WinBuilder, UBCD4Win, and WinFLPC. On the Linux side, you can add Debian, Ubuntu, Fedora, CentOS, PartedMagic , and any ISO that works with Grub4dos CD emulation. Even more obscure utilities—from antivirus rescue disks to the Ultimate Boot CD—can be incorporated without hassle.
Check the box Downloads | WinSetupFromUSB.
This article explores the features of the 1.10 release, how to install it, and a step-by-step guide to creating your own multiboot USB. What is WinSetupFromUSB 1.10 (07Nov2021)?
: Increased the warning threshold for large disk selection to > 64 GB to prevent accidental data loss on high-capacity external drives.
Explain how to add (like Linux) to the same USB.
It was a generic, 32GB USB 2.0 drive, the plastic casing yellowed slightly with age. Written on it in black permanent marker, fading but legible, was the string of characters that Silas had sworn by: