For pure cloud-native OS deployment, look at (boots over the internet) or iVentoy (PXE boot from a local server), though neither replaces Rufus’s simplicity. Conclusion: A Match Made in Utility Heaven Rufus and Google Drive don’t have a formal partnership, and you’ll never see a “Save to Drive” button inside Rufus. But for millions of users, they form a practical, powerful duo. Google Drive becomes the off-site ISO repository , and Rufus remains the on-site burning tool .
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Have your own Rufus + Google Drive hack? Share it in the comments below. ~1,150 Reading time: 5 minutes rufus google drive
This feature explores why these two tools are frequently mentioned together, how you can use them in tandem, and the smart (and not-so-smart) ways to combine local OS creation with cloud storage. Before diving into the cloud, let's acknowledge the star of the show. Rufus (Reliable USB Formatting Utility) is a 1.5MB executable that can turn a standard USB stick into a bootable drive for Windows, Linux, or firmware utilities. Unlike many bloated competitors, Rufus is famous for its speed—often creating bootable drives in half the time of other tools. For pure cloud-native OS deployment, look at (boots
| Tool | How It Integrates with Cloud | |------|------------------------------| | | Once installed on a USB, you can drag/drop ISO files from Google Drive (via local sync) onto the drive without reformatting. | | Etcher | Similar to Rufus but has a more polished UI; same need for local ISO. | | WoeUSB (Linux) | Can be scripted to pull ISO from Google Drive using gdown (a Python tool for Drive downloads). | Google Drive becomes the off-site ISO repository ,