Curated collection of useful to have programs on a multiboot USB drive
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Curated collection of useful to have programs on a multiboot USB drive

Curated collection of useful to have programs on a multiboot USB drive

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README

Project documentation from GitHub

Your All-in-One USB Drive for Tech Emergencies

Ever had one of those days where you need to boot a dead laptop, recover some files, or test a network, and you find yourself shuffling through a drawer full of different USB sticks? Each one has a single purpose—a Linux installer here, a diagnostics tool there. It’s messy and easy to lose the one you actually need.

What if you could have just one USB drive that boots into a menu packed with practically every essential utility you might need? That’s the idea behind the AIO USB Drive project. It’s a curated, multi-boot setup that turns a single USB stick into a Swiss Army knife for troubleshooting, recovery, and system administration.

What It Does

In short, this project provides a set of scripts and configurations to build a single USB drive that can boot into a selection of over a dozen useful tools and operating systems. Instead of creating separate bootable drives for each utility, you use tools like Ventoy to create a multi-boot environment and then populate it with this project’s carefully selected ISO files. The result is a drive with a boot menu offering everything from disk cloning to password recovery, live Linux environments, and network analysis tools.

Why It's Cool

The cool factor isn't in a single piece of novel code, but in the thoughtful curation and consolidation. Someone has done the legwork of testing and gathering stable versions of tools that actually work well together in a multi-boot setup. This saves you hours of searching, downloading, and testing compatibility yourself.

The selection is pragmatic and focused on real-world utility. It includes heavy-hitters like:

  • GParted Live for disk partitioning.
  • DBAN and ShredOS for secure erasure.
  • Hiren’s BootCD PE and Medicat for a massive suite of Windows-based recovery tools.
  • MemTest86 for checking your RAM.
  • Clonezilla for system imaging and cloning.
  • Ubuntu and Arch Linux installers for general-purpose tasks.
  • Kali Linux and PCAPr for security and network analysis.

It’s the kind of tool you hope you never need, but you’re incredibly glad to have when a drive fails, a system won’t boot, or you need to work on a machine without an OS.

How to Try It

This isn’t a downloadable, pre-made image. It’s a repository that guides you in building your own. Here’s the basic workflow:

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Last updated: Dec 11, 2025