There's now only a button to restore back to a MacOS-only state, and no obvious way to download Boot Camp drivers and install manually.Īll in all, not a very smooth experience! A bit disappointing, I might say, after years away from the Mac world.Īnyone with similar experiences? Should I just try the whole process again (i.e. And the latest Boot Camp Assistant (6.1.x) within Sierra seems to have been dumbed down. After more googling, it seems Apple no longer releases Boot Camp 6 files. I did get WiFi to work after manually installing a Broadcom driver but I very much would like to have Boot Camp within Windows. Indeed I can't seem to find any evidence that Apple has installed anything. If you’ve downloaded Windows 10 ISO image, here is how you can create a bootable Windows installer USB on Mac using UNetbootin.
UNetbootin is a free, open source utility that allows you to create bootable USB drives on Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X. There's no Apple Software Update, either. Method 1: Create Windows 10 Bootable USB on Mac Using UNetbottin.
Before you begin, make a full backup of your Mac using Time Machine that you can restore to in case anything goes wrong. I also couldn't find bookcamp.msi or other executables. The following step by step tutorial will help you install Windows 10 on Mac using Boot Camp Assistant software by Apple. I searched for evidence of Boot Camp Utility but none was found.
After lots of googling I realized Boot Camp should have kicked in within Windows and installed some drivers. If The boot camp installer does NOT start automatically, go to the WININSTALL drive, open the boot camp folder and start it from there. As soon as it turns back on it will begin the BootCamp installer. In MacOS Sierra (10.12.5) I started Book Camp Assistant (6.1.x) to install a pre-downloaded Win10 64-bit Anniversary edition (with plan to update within Win10 to the latest Creator version). Once Windows is finished installing the computer will reboot. I recently bought a MacBook Air 13-inch Early 2015 with 256 Gb.