Elias froze. He pulled the Ethernet cable, but it was too late. When he tried to reboot, he wasn't met with his desktop. Instead, a simple block of text appeared on a black screen: “Thanks for the keys to the kingdom.”

: Many users prefer Rufus , which is a free, open-source tool for creating bootable drives.

Elias sat in the blue glow of his monitor, the clock on his taskbar ticking toward 3:00 AM. He was looking for a way to carry his entire workspace on a thumb drive, and a search result for "WinToUSB 7.1 Crack" seemed like the perfect shortcut. It promised the full "Technician" experience without the price tag.

If you're looking to put Windows on a USB drive, it's safer to use the official free version or verified alternatives:

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