With a less intuitive interface (compared to Etcher) this tool is able to do more than burning. Once burned verifies that the copy has been done correctly and then you have the possibility to auto eject the SD card when finished.Įtcher can be downloaded from here. Easy mode: EtcherĮtcher is the easiest way I’ve found to burn an image to an SD, only beaten by ordering the SD already burned online… A clean interface, intuitive steps and is able to perform the job well. I’ll present 3 alternatives ordered by difficulty, beginning from the easiest. Once the image is downloaded (about 348 MB) We will be facing the question: which method We will be using to burn that image to an SD card? It is not a post about burning performance, nor the best SD card to buy, it’s just a post about showing you some of the alternatives that you have to burn your SD cards for your Raspberry Pi (maybe some other platforms that uses the same booting mechanism too).įor this, I’ll be burning the image base Raspbian Stretch Lite from (latest when this post is being written) that you can download from here. A friend of mine recommended me to use an image burner that I didn’t know, and since I had some alternatives to perform the burn operation I’ve decided to write a little post about it. For a recent project, I had to burn several Raspbian images into some SD cards.
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