If you absolutely must have an ISO (for CD/DVD burning or legacy hypervisors), only attempt this with minimal Linux systems under 1.5 GB. For everything else, embrace USB imaging – it's faster, more reliable, and actually bootable on modern hardware.
Virtual machines are great for testing, but what happens when you need to take that perfectly configured Linux environment or legacy Windows system and run it on physical hardware? You need a bootable ISO.
EOF
If you absolutely must have an ISO (for CD/DVD burning or legacy hypervisors), only attempt this with minimal Linux systems under 1.5 GB. For everything else, embrace USB imaging – it's faster, more reliable, and actually bootable on modern hardware.
Virtual machines are great for testing, but what happens when you need to take that perfectly configured Linux environment or legacy Windows system and run it on physical hardware? You need a bootable ISO. convert vdi to bootable iso
EOF