
- #RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL HOW TO#
- #RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL INSTALL#
- #RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL SOFTWARE#
- #RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL CODE#
- #RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL LICENSE#
In addition, files can’t jump onto the drive so an extra security measure against a virus or malware spreading through USB. The drive acts like a true optical disc in the operating system, the files are read-only and files cannot be deleted or formatted off the drive.
#RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL LICENSE#
With the above information in hand, if you are in search of creating a “true” USB CD-ROM flash drive then a Disc License drive is the right solution. We then took the Disc License drive and put the USB into a Mac computer to see how the OS handled the drive, and as you can see below, Mac computers also treat the drive as a USB CD-ROM flash drive. Nor does Windows give the option to delete a file. As you can see from the screen shot below since Windows flagged this device as a CD-ROM, Microsoft doesn’t even give the option to format. Trying to do the same thing we did with the Rufus flash drive, let us try and format the device. As shown from the screen shot below you can see Windows assigned the USB flash drive a CD-ROM icon because, from a hardware stand-point, Windows thinks the USB is an optical disc. Once the ISO file is “burned” to the USB flash drive the end result is an optical disc with your content. The capacity of the blank USB CD-ROM is the same as the GB capacity of the flash drive itself. This is equivilant to a blank CD-R or DVD-R. As you can see in this screen shot below, the device is a “RAW” CD-ROM drive.

The Disc License drive by Nexcopy is a blank USB CD-ROM flash drive when it’s connected to the host computer. It is not required for the ISO to be bootable, only an image file with the file extension of. The Nexcopy solution will take any ISO file and copy the data to the USB flash drive to make a true USB CD-ROM flash drive.
#RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL SOFTWARE#
#RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL HOW TO#
Many users search the internet on how to make a USB CD-ROM flash drive from an ISO file and will never get a straight answer (until now).
#RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL INSTALL#
However making a bootable USB drive for an operating system install might not be your ultimate goal. Here, Windows can format the content created by Rufus. Here, Windows assigns the typical flash drive icon to the device. It does not appear as a CD-ROM and the device is not read-only (write protected).

Thank you Rufus!Īs you can see from the image below the resultant drive from Rufus is a standard read/write flash drive. With optical drives all but gone from laptops and computers and Microsoft supplying ISO files for their operating system, something needs to be done for getting the data of the ISO file copied to a flash drive, which of course must be bootable, and used in computers lacking a CD drive. Taking operating system ISO files and writing them to flash drives. A non-bootable image will display an error message saying “This image is either non-bootable, or it uses a boot or compression method that is not supported by Rufus.” If the ISO file isn’t bootable, there isn’t much Rufus can offer. With that said, there is a clear advantage for using Rufus over WinRAR.ĭoes Rufus make your USB flash drive read-only, like a CD? NO.
#RUFUS ISO USB TUTORIAL CODE#
The Rufus software will write all the files contained in an ISO file along with the boot code to make your device bootable. WinRAR will extract all the files contained in an ISO file and write them to your USB flash drive however, if the ISO is bootable, WinRAR won’t write the boot code. The resultant drive will be a USB CD-ROM flash drive.īefore we get into Disc License technology, we do need to clear up some points about WinRAR and Rufus software. Using their Drive Wizard software (free), easily write ISO files to USB. The Disc License drive is a blank USB CD-ROM flash drive. If you need to make a USB CD-ROM flash drive the best solution found so far, is the Disc License drive. There is nothing magical about Rufus when it comes to “making a CD” because Rufus doesn’t make a “CD.” Basically Rufus will extra the data on an ISO file and write it to the flash drive. The only thing Rufus does is take a bootable ISO file and write the data to a USB stick.

However, there is a big misconception with Rufus… it doesn’t create USB CD-ROM drives! If anyone searches for “burn ISO to USB” they will get pages and pages of Rufus links.
