- Aug 02, 2017 Create a Bootable USB High Sierra Installer in Mac OS X 10.13 - Duration. How to Create a Mac OS X USB Boot Drive on Windows - Duration: 6:53. Kevin Muldoon 585,504 views.
- Sep 07, 2017 Before High Sierra becomes available in the Mac App Store, download Sierra, and follow the Apple HT201372 article, Create a bootable installer for macOS, using a 16 GB USB3 stick. When you have made the USB bootable installer, you can then choose to move the Sierra installer to Trash, or move to an external drive.
Apple stripped the ability to make Windows 10 install media from a flash drive or external SSD in Sierra, but sometimes, you still need to be able to do it from a Microsoft-provided download. AppleInsider shows you how to do it.
First, get the .ISO file from Microsoft here. Importantly, this doesn't contain a license code, so you'll need to get one of those yourself.
Mar 12, 2020. If your Mac is using macOS Sierra or earlier, include the -applicationpath argument, similar to the way this argument is used in the command for El Capitan. Use the bootable installer After creating the bootable installer, follow these steps to use it.
We implore you — get the .ISO from Microsoft. Don't use a shady source.
Making a Windows 10 install disk from macOS High Sierra isn't as simple as formatting a drive in Disk Utility and copying over files in the Finder — you need to use the Terminal. So, mount the disk you want to make install media, and open up the Terminal.
Find the name of the drive that you want to install the media on. Be sure that you've got this right — because in later steps you can do massive damage to your boot drive if you're not careful.
Type diskutil list in the Terminal window to get a list of your drives. In our case here, it's 'disk2.' We'll use 'disk2' going forward with this tip, but in the place of 'disk2' use which disk identifier is appropriate for you.
Next, we'll format the disk in Terminal. Enter
This will format the drive suitable for a UEFI boot, name it 'WINDOWS10,' and mount it.
Your Windows 10 .ISO file download is probably in your Downloads folder. Mount the .ISO by double-clicking on it. It is probably called 'CCCOMA_X64FRE_EN-US_DV9' but double-check.
A Finder copy doesn't work. In the Terminal enter:
cp -rp /Volumes/CCCOMA_X64FRE_EN-US_DV9/* /Volumes/WINDOWS10/
The Terminal will sit there for a minute, seemingly unfazed by your command. However, it is working, and after a period of time depending on the speed of your media it will complete unceremoniously — but your data will be copied, and your media will be bootable.
How To Create A Rescue Usb For Mac Sierra Mac
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