

Once it's done, unmount the USB drive (right-click and select Eject) from the desktop. Boot Camp Assistant will create the bootable Windows 10 USB.Select the Windows 10 ISO image from Mac's internal storage and select Continue.Select Continue, and check the option to Create a Windows 10 or later install disk.Go to Finder > Applications > Utilities and launch Boot Camp Assistant.To create a bootable Windows disk using BootCamp: You will also need a 16GB USB disk, alongside the Windows ISO file for this method. Note: You can't use Boot Camp Assistant on Macs with Apple M1 chips. You can also choose to install additional Windows support software, which will be helpful if you are planning to use the bootable disk to install Windows on your Mac. This is an easy method and requires no additional software to be installed. If you have a Mac with an Intel processor, you can also use BootCamp Assistant to create a bootable Windows installation USB disk. I was asking if anyone knew a program for a mac that can clone an iso file to a usb drive without having to fight with the command line? thanks in advance.Method 2: Create a Bootable USB Disk Using BootCamp Assistant

And I can't use the command line to clone it, because as I said before, I am blind, and can't use the computer without a screen reader, so it's hard for me to read each letter or number one by one, then switch to the turminnal to try and copy it in their. However, their is no version of this program for a mac. But I need to do it using a mac for use with my windows computer. For windows, their is a program called, isotousb, that can be used to clone an iso file to and make it bootible. This is simply so that you can run the same command again after inserting USB and easily spot the USB device. You know, like when you click on a disk image, and a new partition mounts in the finder? What I'm trying to do is clone the iso to a usb drive and make it bootible so my windows computer can boot from it. use dd command to burn Linux installation ISO onto USB stick Step 1: Confirm partitions before inserting USB Use the diskutil command to list all disks and partitions on your Mac. A better turm would be, clone, the partition that is on the disk image. I'm not trying to copy the iso to the usb drive using the finder.
