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Example: Extracting a Windows 10 ISO and splitting a large install.wim into smaller SWM parts suitable for FAT32-formatted USB drives.
This is the primary function of the tool. It installs the Aio Boot structure onto your drive.
In version 0.9.8.17, the software is intelligent. It usually detects your USB drive automatically.
Using Aio Boot Extractor on a system you own or have explicit written permission to audit is legal. However:
Let’s walk through a practical example—extracting the UEFI boot components from a Windows 11 ISO. Aio Boot Extractor V0.9.8.17
Step 1: Launch Aio_Boot_Extractor_V0.9.8.17.exe (no admin rights required for extraction, but admin may be needed if you’re reading from a physical drive).
Step 2: Click "Open Source" and browse to your Windows 11 ISO file.
Step 3: The tool automatically scans the image. In the left panel, you’ll see a tree view:
Step 4: Select EFI System Partition → EFI\BOOT\bootx64.efi. On the right, click "Extract Selected". Example: Extracting a Windows 10 ISO and splitting
Step 5: Choose an output folder (e.g., C:\ExtractedBoot\). The file is saved with its original name.
Step 6: (Optional) Use the "Dump Boot Sector" button to save the MBR as a .bin file for analysis in a hex editor.
Advanced tip: Hold Ctrl to select multiple files (e.g., all .efi drivers) and extract them in one batch.
Enter Aio Boot (All-in-One Boot), a free software developed by a Vietnamese developer (often known by the handle Tu Nguyen or simply Aio Boot on forums). It was an ambitious project that aimed to solve every bootable USB problem simultaneously. It wasn't just an extractor; it was an ecosystem. In version 0
Aio Boot was unique because:
While the developer (often pseudonymous “AiO” or “Admin in Overtime”) does not maintain an official changelog, user-compiled notes indicate:
No digital signature is present on the executable, which is a red flag for enterprise security policies.