Click . The backup will now appear in your "This PC" section as if it were a physical external hard drive plugged into your computer. Step 2: Use an ISO Imaging Tool to Capture the Data
Acronis True Image is available for macOS, but not natively for Linux. On Linux, your options are limited to running Acronis in a virtual machine or using WINE (which may not work reliably). The TIBX format is proprietary and not supported by standard Linux tools.
If your backup is encrypted, you must provide the password when mounting the TIBX file in Method 2. Without it, third-party software cannot extract the contents. Conclusion
Before diving into the conversion process, it is important to understand why these files are fundamentally different.
To help you decide on the best path, here's a quick comparison:
Directly converting a file (a proprietary backup format used by Acronis Cyber Protect Home Office and modern Acronis True Image versions) into a bootable ISO image is not supported by standard conversion tools. Because .tibx files are archives designed for incremental backups rather than raw disc images, you cannot simply "rename" or "convert" them with standard software.
You need a tool that can read TIBX archives.
The technical reasons for this limitation stem from the fundamental differences between TIBX and ISO formats:
StarWind V2V Converter is a popular and free tool for this purpose.