


MiniTool Partition Wizard 9.1 Bootable ISO: MiniTool Partition Wizard 9.1 and earlier versions use Linux. By using AIO Boot, you can easily integrate both versions into a single USB drive. Since version 10, the MiniTool Partition Wizard Bootable version uses the WinPE platform. This article guides you how to make a MiniTool Partition Wizard bootable USB from its ISO file. So, without further preamble lets take both for a spin and see what the new v11 has to offer.MiniTool Partition Wizard is a well-known partition manager. With an asking price starting at only $39 USD the paid version certainly seems like a good idea, but maybe the ‘free’ version is ‘good enough’ for your needs. Today we will be looking at the free and Pro versions to see if they still work as well as they did before (when we tested v8), what has changed, and if the paid version is right for you. The first is the ‘free’ (aka shareware/freeware) edition, then the $39/$59 ‘Pro’ version (depending on if you want a one-time purchase or free lifetime upgrades), then there ‘Pro Ultimate’ edition. Much like most companies, MiniTool’s Partition Wizard comes in a few different formats. This is where companies like MiniTool and their Partition Wizard version 11 software come into play. With that being said Microsoft still has done very little to fix the clunky, kludge, and downright data unsafe methods they expect you to use when doing even basic partition related tasks. This is not all that surprising as storage technology may have advanced from spindle & platter to NAND but the underlying ideas on how a partition(s) are configured has not changed all that much.

It seems like ages ago that we took a look at the state of drive partition manipulation software and in the intervening years… not much has changed.
