Clonezilla -iso-image- -64 Bit- — 2.1.1-25

While it is no longer the recommended version for modern hardware, it remains a historical milestone for users maintaining older 64-bit systems. Core Specifications June 2013.

Approximately – small enough to fit on a CD-R, USB flash drive, or even a 256 MB SD card. clonezilla -iso-image- -64 bit- 2.1.1-25

By default, it uses ZIP compression to reduce image size, though users can manually select gzip, LZMA, or bzip2. A standard OS image is typically compressed to 1/2 or 1/3 of its original size. While it is no longer the recommended version

Use your preferred burning software (ImgBurn, Brasero, or Windows Disc Image Burner) to write the ISO to a blank disc. By default, it uses ZIP compression to reduce

There are three main types of Clonezilla:

The Clonezilla 2.1.1-25 (64-bit) ISO image can be downloaded from the official Clonezilla website. Once downloaded, the image can be written to a USB drive or CD/DVD using a tool like Rufus or Etcher. The live image can then be booted from, allowing users to create backups or clones of their hard drives or partitions.

: Download and archive this ISO on a secure internal server. Burn a few CDs or flash drives. Document its use in your disaster recovery playbook. Years from now, when faced with an ancient machine that refuses to boot any modern tool, you’ll be glad you kept Clonezilla 2.1.1-25 alive.