The solution is to split the file, as described in the ![]() One of the files in the current 64-bit version of the Windows 10 installer, Requires the USB drive be formatted as FAT32, which has a file size limit of 4 GB. This helped, but I came across a problem: the installer ![]() He suggests formatting the USB disk on the command lineĪnd copying the files over manually. I found a guide from a guy called Josh Beam Originally it seems that you could create a bootable USB disk using MacOS's Boot Camp Assistant ,īut that option seems to've been removed in recent versions of MacOS. Special requirements in order to be bootable (it uses a special UEFI boot process). Normally I use etcher for burning ISOs, but a Windows USB installer has Wimlib and some terminal/command prompt usage. The process is straightforward, but requires one third party tool called Windows 10 disk image (ISO) file from Microsoft. ![]() If you haven't already done so, you'll need to download the This is a quick "how to" guide to make a bootable Windows 10 USB drive/stick Split size (previously 4000 MB) and suggesting legacy BIOS mode. Update : Thanks to Parul Jain for emailing in with the 3800 MB
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