![]() ![]() It’s also a whole lot easier to replace an ISO on the Ventoy device with an updated ISO, when desired. The upside is there is no menu needed at all - or any need to customize anything else, for that matter - and no extraneous files on the USB device to get in the way. The downside is there is no menu to customize with user-friendly names for the ISOs. When the USB device is booted, Ventoy displays a menu of all ISOs on the device, listed in alphabetical order. Once that is done, you simply copy your ISOs onto the device. In contrast, the Ventoy app is needed only to initially prep the USB device. But that results in a two-screen menu system: the first menu is for YUMI’s extracted ISOs (empty, in my case), and an extra click is needed to get to the “unlisted ISOs” menu. I see no good reason why an ISO’s contents need be extracted first, so the latter is really the only option I’m interested in. However, YUMI does have a catch-all option to add “unlisted ISOs”, which will copy the ISO intact and won’t try to extract it. This has several disadvantages: it requires you to add each ISO through the YUMI app it limits your choices to ISOs YUMI supports and it splatters your USB device with lots of extraneous files and subdirectories to facilitate YUMI’s operation. YUMI is really designed to extract the contents of each ISO image and copy them to individual subdirectories on the USB drive. I’ve been using YUMI for the same purpose, so I was curious to take a closer look to see how Ventoy compares. ![]() ![]() Nice find, Thanks for bringing it to our attention! ![]()
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