It does require a FAT32 partition with the required files, but the disk can be formatted with MBR or GPT. It turns out that a lot of UEFI firmware does not care how the disk is formatted. Having both schemes on the same disk is possible but not very practical. For UEFI, you should have a GPT (over 2GB) formatted disk with a FAT32 partition with the required files for UEFI boot. In theory, for legacy BIOS you should have your drive with a MBR partition table with an active partition, a master boot record and boot sector on your active partition. The method described here, it’s not a general solution but has proven to work relatively well. However, MDT does not generate a dual boot solution. Microsoft Deployment Toolkit (2013 or SCCM) has a very nice feature that allows you to deploy a task sequence to a flash drive or a CD and end up with a portable storage with all your deployment options.
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