UNetbootin (Universal Netboot Installer) is a free and open-source application for creating bootable live USB drives from Linux distributions, Windows installers, and other ISO images. It also supports a variety of different USB drive formats, allowing users to create bootable USB sticks for almost any operating system. This versatile program can also be used to create bootable USB drives for specific software applications, such as antivirus suites, system recovery tools, Linux distributions, and more. UNetbootin is a great option for users who don’t have access to a CD or DVD drive, or who just want a simple and easy way to create a bootable USB drive.
Actually seems to work under OS X unlike Unetbootin now
Making an Arch boot key was a nightmare on a Mac with UNetbootin, no way to make it work. With Etcher one try and it was perfectly fine :)
Etcher combines the universality of UNetbootin with the functionality of Rufus and adds an amazingly simple interface.
Very simple, great interface, awesome! :)
Works on more operating systems. Better language support. Truly open source and free.
I have a 64GB USB stick and UNetbootin insisted on creating an odd FAT32 partition that always failed to boot properly. Also, Windows and Mac had trouble identifying it and/or reading it. Etcher worked the first time. No confusing setup options, just select .iso and burn. simple as it should be!
Very simple and effective, it creates a bootable USB key almost with a single click (very unusual, since we are all struggling with UNetbootin since many years!)
YUMI is the only application I have found that makes reliable USB installers for UEFI systems (GPT partition table, FAT32 partitions) and its multi-boot functions with persistence for the Ubuntu family of distributions are extremely useful.
Discontinued The program seems to be no longer updated. The latest version, 2.9.4, released in September 2015, can still be downloaded from the official website.
Creating a bootable USB drive involves more than just moving bit blocks.
It is not a full-featured GUI application like the rest, but it is more flexible, versatile and reliable for more tech-savvy users.
It's easier than the GUI if you don't deal with UEFI stuff.
it is not a burning iso software ...
MultiSystem is a good alternative to UNetBootin and creates an ISO menu to allow you to select which image to load. UNetBootin only allows the installation of one image / distribution per disk.
Bundleware Installer con adware: https://www.virustotal.com/en/file/efc98043b5e2d3f36e4cfce1074e66dfc7859345195ad3cbf51605df6c7b1e53/analysis/1424526399/
By joelandrigan · Nov 2017
Solo intenté usar esto en una Mac, así que no estoy revisando esto para otros sistemas operativos. . . ¡No fue suficiente para eso! Dicho esto, descargué Linux Mint, instalé UNetbootin y traté de usarlo. Seleccioné la imagen ISO, hasta ahora todo bien. . . pero cuando intenté buscar en la carpeta de descargas, no mostraba ningún archivo, incluso después de 5 minutos. Instalé Etcher y pude encontrar el archivo inmediatamente.
By gregzeng · May 2018
Mejor que la mayoría (todos?) Otros. Funciona igual en Linux (la mayoría de las versiones) y en la mayoría (¿todo?) Windows. Escritura rápida en todas las memorias USB y tarjetas flash. Permite que solo el sistema operativo BOOT "ISO" se instale de manera predeterminada, por tarjeta o tarjeta falsa. Otros problemas son independiente de Unetbootin. (1) No se puede leer y escribir en el medio flash (tarjeta o stick). Use una aplicación DRIVE PARTITION, para reparar la tarjeta o el stick, si alguna vez puede ser reparado; (gparted en Linux, Easeus Partition Master Free Edition en Windows, etc.) (2) Quiere que se instalen múltiples opciones de ISO, desde un menú de opciones; use YUMI, en su lugar, o tan bien como Unetbootin.
Easy to use. I used it with 2.10 queues when unetbootin didn't work.