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In "option 5", which I always use, when the UFD is formatted with FAT32, it is also "converted" to MBR. I suppose the same happens in Option 4, and therefore the "convert mbr" command is not needed [I havenīt tried].
In "option 5", which I always use, when the UFD is formatted with FAT32, it is also "converted" to MBR. I suppose the same happens in Option 4, and therefore the "convert mbr" command is not needed [I havenīt tried].
heyy Shawn Brink
Option 4 Manually create Bootable Windows 10 USB for Legacy BIOS and UEFI in Command Prompt - you have converted the usb to mbr... but can the UEFI recognize an mbr usb ?? I read that gpt is for uefi and mbr for legacy bios
I used the following method to create a bootable USB device that supported both UEFI and Legacy.
How to make active@boot disk bootable on uefi/gpt?
Why not? What is the difference?
I mean what is the difference between formatting with cmd instead of right click-format
The commands in option 4 doesn't just format the USB. It also makes the USB bootable.
Right click - format only formats the USB, but it will not be bootable.