This could be challenging task for most people. This can be done with wimlib, a command line utility for macOS. However, the latest Windows 10 ISO is too large to sit on a FAT32 partition so you have to split the install.wim into small parts. So the only working file system for Mac is FAT32 if you want to create a Windows bootable USB on Mac. MacOS does not support NTFS by default and exFAT is not recognized as a bootable device by most computer motherboards. Windows 10 ISO image is too large (install.wim > 4GB) It wasted me hours playing with Terminal app when trying to create a Windows 10 bootable USB on my MacBook Pro with Big Sur 11.1.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |