hi every one, now i reverted to 1909 , but i received an update today (Edge update)...now i'm facing the same issue on 2004 a couple of sites built with Larval have a popup module login, it generates an error , doesn't happen without the update and it doesn't happen on Ubuntu any ideas!
It was probably all me Just kidding, Ventoy is great, but it's so new, and the development goes so fast, that nobody can keep up with the speed at which the author is releasing new features and versions
As noted above, UEFI boot of NTFS volumes is only limited by manufacturers. I have an old Dell Inspiron 3521 circa 2013 and it happily boots from NTFS formatted UEFI installation media as well as FAT32. Even if your device can't boot from NTFS UEFI, Rufus can make a hybrid drive that uses a small FAT32 partition to boot from with the installation media on a separate NTFS partition.
Well, in fact it does not format the complete drive in exFAT (or NTFS, or ....) but only one partition. It also creates a small (hidden) FAT32 partition, needed for UEFI, and also all other "behind the scenes" Ventoy files are stored on it. Thanks for taking the trouble to read the docs so far, maybe you'll find the time to do some more experiments. The ISO file size is not the point. It's the "install.wim" inside the ISO.
Yes, I didn't pay attention to that, but it depends on which method you use. With Ventoy what matters is the size of the ISO as it is not extracted. Of course, if install.wim is larger than 4 GB the ISO will also be.
Works fine. Saves a lot of hassle, just dump ISO on stick, select via menu, and boot I have numerous ISO's on stick this way, including Linux, just choose what you want each time, easy peasy.
That seems to be very rare, i only know that @whatever127 had some hardware for which a driver was available, the majority doesn't.
Now you know another. As I stated above, my old Dell Inspiron 3521 circa 2013 happily boots install.wims > 4GB on NTFS formatted external HDD's/thumb drives in UEFI mode.
Yes for some reason they adopted FAT32 as a kind of "standard" luckily we have the community to help us with alternatives
Its only happened once but I ran into a system that staunchly refused to boot from FAT32 boot drives but booted from a NTFS boot drive. The stupid system had me tearing my hair out trying to reinstall windows. I tried a NTFS drive just to check that off the list and it worked.