Hi guys, basically as the title says I want to make external SSD drive with Windows to go for the stuff that I really need Windows for unfortunately (proprietary CAD software) but there is no software for making this on Linux that I can find
Hi guys, basically as the title says I want to make external SSD drive with Windows to go for the stuff that I really need Windows for unfortunately (proprietary CAD software) but there is no software for making this on Linux that I can find
No I don’t want to make a bootable USB already have a Ventoy USB drive for that in Windows With Rufus or win to USB you can install an Windows iso as Windows to go to a external drive (can be a thumb drive or a SSD) and then boot from that drive and have functioning Windows installation on it which is also kinda portable too
https://www.easyuefi.com/wintousb/
Thanks I know there is wintousb software but it is also Windows specific I don’t have Windows around to use it
Wine for wintousb or make a vhd for Ventoy.
So, like, Ventoy with persistence?
Interesting but it seems to be only for Linux
So Ventoy, as I mentioned.
https://pureinfotech.com/ventoy-create-bootable-usb-windows-11-10/
https://www.techbloat.com/how-to-create-a-bootable-windows-11-usb-drive-with-ventoy-a-simple-guide.html
https://windowsreport.com/windows-11-ventoy/
(Note - these are random articles found via DDG. I don’t do portable windows, I run a VM)
You sure WintoUSB is not Windows specific software?
It runs under wine, but check versions at the winehq db for what to grab.
None of these are what he’s asking about. He wants windows installed on a flash drive, so he can boot to it and be in the OS, with windows seeing the flash drive as C:
So they want the second one I mentioned, WinToUSB.
Edit: Though to be clear you can do this with Ventoy too, just make a vhd.
You don’t need to do anything special. Take an NVMe or SSD and put it internally in some PC—ideally the same computer you want to use it on, for driver reasons—then install Windows on it. (Windows won’t let you install to a USB device, so you have to put the drive internally in the PC.) Then take it back out, put it in an external enclosure, plug it into USB and it boots right up. (Well, as long as you know how to choose a boot device at startup or make USB a higher priority than your internal drive.)
I just did that on my laptop by taking out the Windows NVMe, putting in a new one for Linux, and then sticking the Windows NVMe in an enclosure.
Obviously, this can’t work on a thumb drive, but it’s not terribly inconvenient to carry around an enclosure and a cable.
(An LLM told me I should change some registry settings to make loading the USB drivers occur earlier during boot, but that doesn’t make much sense. How could it boot enough to load the Registry in order to know to load the USB drivers earlier? It’s already booting. But if you try this and have any troubles, I can probably figure out what Registry settings I changed. I’ve also done this with an M.2 SSD from one PC and booted it from a USB enclosure on a different PC, and I definitely made no registry changes then.)
got it thanks the SSD I tried this with in the first try was fairly old. I bought a new one now but it hadn’t arrived yet I will try this again once it arrives
Good luck! I hope it works out for you.