So that just leaves NTFS, which I initially couldn’t create on MacOS. ![]() I tried formatting the USB exFAT instead of FAT32 format… The exFAT formatted USB won’t boot. This will boot, but then fail unless you have an NTFS formatted USB, because it couldn’t find C:/install.wim which is larger than 4GB, which is the max filesize possible with FAT32. # this assumes it's mounted at /Volumes/WINDOWS10Ĭp -vrp /Volumes/CCCOMA_X64FRE_EN-US_DV9/* /Volumes/WINDOWS10 Create Windows 10 (UEFI Only) Bootable USB on Mac OS X 10.14 Philip Yip 6.98K subscribers Subscribe 27K views 2 years ago Windows 10 Version 2004 This video will instruct in. # Copy the iso contents to the USB stick Launch Boot Camp on your Mac you can do this from Applications > Utilities in Finder or by using Spotlight. Open the Utilities folder, find Terminal and launch it. ![]() ![]() Alternatively, go to Finder and click Applications. Step 2: Press Command + Spacebar, type Terminal, and launch it. It has no limitations, just 3 clicks (download, launch and burn) to get a bootable USB drive on your Mac. From my past experience, UUByte ISO Editor is even better than Bootcamp and UNetbootin. Hdiutil mount ~/Downloads/Win10_20H2_v2_English_圆4.iso Step 1: Plug a USB drive with at least 16 GB of storage space into the USB port on your Mac. UUByte ISO Editor is a free trial software but you can get a Windows 11 bootable USB installer in less than 20 minutes. Copy to clipboard # Cribbed from Josh Beam
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