A:
This drive is not restricted as to what it can contain. ISO files are meant for "burning" onto movable media, such as a CD or DVD, from which then the actual material can be run. This drive is fine for storing the ISO, it can be made into a bootable drive, and one can install an ISO file stored on it to the CD-R or DVD-R with ease, but one ordinarily doesn't install the material onto a thumb drive, although that can be done. There is enough room on this drive to take on a full virtual computer that can be run from such hypervisor software as Virtual Box, VM Player, or Hyper-V. Indeed, I have thought of loading onto this drive a virtual machine running Windows XP, but I have not done that. Doing that would enable me to take along with me a little-finger-sized virtual computer, which will run on any Windows-based or Linux-based computer that has installed on it any of the three hypervisor programs that I mentioned. This type of drive is thousands of times faster than a hard drive.