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Boot Camp Assistant Installer Disk Could Not Be Found

22.08.2019
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Boot Camp Assistant Installer Disk Could Not Be Found Rating: 5,7/10 1896 reviews
  1. Boot Camp Assistant Installer Disk Could Not Be Found Dead
  2. Boot Camp Assistant Installer Disk Could Not Be Found

An optical disk. Cannot Install Windows 7 With Bootcamp with USB Key Mac OS X 10.9.5. Nov 13, 2014. Boot Camp Assistant 'Windows 7 Installer disc could not be found'. 12648 Views disc sharing. USB drive with downloaded Windows drivers is in place. Your Windows Boot Camp will scream at you “The installer. If you are using Lion, there is an easy way to use Bootcamp to install Windows. Bootcamp in itself has support to create Windows 7 install disk from iso file, but by default it is disabled for Macbook Pros. Check out this link for how to do it. With Lion, Apple has added an option to BootCamp that will create a bootable USB Windows 7 install disk. Select only the options to create a Windows install disk and to download the latest Windows support software from Apple. Then click Continue. Insert your Windows install disc, or choose your Windows installation ISO, then click Continue. Boot Camp erases your USB flash drive and prepares it for Windows installation.

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For all those Mac users who have been eagerly waiting to install and experience the next generation Windows 8 operating system on Mac machine, here is the simple procedure that you need to follow to install Windows 10/8 on your Mac using the Boot Camp Assistant software.

What you will need:

Boot

# Windows 10/8 DVD, ISO, or USB

# A USB drive with 8GB or more capacity

# One hour free time

We are going to use the Boot Camp Assistant software available on Mac. Boot Camp helps you install Windows OS on Intel-based Mac by downloading the necessary support software, creating a partition on your disk for Windows, and then starting the Windows installer.

NOTE: We assume that you have an Intel-based Mac machine with Boot Camp Assistant version 5.0 or later. It’s always a good idea to backup the important data on your computer before installing Windows on Mac. We used MacBook Air (mid 2013) to install Windows 10 on the Mac. The procedure to install Windows 8 or Windows 10 on other Mac machines might be a bit different and pretty much the same.

Procedure:

Step 1: Launch Boot Camp Assistant software. To launch it, go to Utilities and click on Boot Camp Assistant to open it.

Step 2: Once launched, click Continue button on the introduction screen to see the list of options available for your Mac. You will see three options:

# Create a Windows 7 or later version install disk

Tech

# Download the latest Windows support software from Apple

# Install Windows 7 or later version

If Create a Windows 7 or later version install disk option is not available on your Mac, it’s because your computer doesn’t support installing Windows from USB flash drive. Simply select the other options available and click Continue button.

By default, all three options are enabled. If you are on Mac Mini or MacBook Air, use the first option (Create a Windows 7 or later version install disk) to create a bootable Windows 10/8 USB flash drive to install Windows 10/8 directly from USB flash drive. Click Continue button to proceed to the next step.

Step 3:(Please skip this step if you haven’t selected Create a Windows 7 or later version install disk option in the above step) In this step, you need to select the Windows 10/8 ISO file and the USB device that you want to use to install Windows 10/8. Boot Camp Assistant will create a bootable USB drive for Windows 10/8 installation. Once you select the ISO file and destination USB drive, click Continue button.

Click Continue button if you are prompted with “The drive will be erased” message. Boot Camp Assistant may take a several minutes to create the bootable Windows 10/8 USB drive (it will also download Windows support software from Apple). Once Boot Camp Assistant finishes creating bootable Windows 10/8 USB, you will get “Boot Camp Assistant is trying to add new helper tool. Type your password to allow this” message. Type in the password and click Add Helper button to continue.

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Step 4: Boot Camp Assistant now takes you to Create a partition for Windows window. Drag the divider between the partitions to set the size of the partitions. We recommend a minimum of 30 GB for Windows partition (Microsoft recommends 16 GB but if you want to install other software on Windows 10/8, allocate 30GB).

Click Install button to start partitioning the drive and then begin installing Windows 10/8 on your Mac. Your Mac machine will automatically reboot to begin installing Windows. You will see “Booting from Boot Camp Assistant created boot drive” message.

OR

If you haven’t selected Create a Windows 7 or later version install disk option in step 2, please insert the Windows 10/8 installation DVD into the tray and click Install button to start partitioning the drive and then Windows installation. Your Mac machine will automatically reboot to begin installing Windows.

From here on follow the on screen procedure until you need to select a partition to install Windows. In the Where do you want to install Windows? screen, select the partition named BOOTCAMP to install Windows 8. Make sure that you format the BOOTCAMP partition before selecting it as an unformatted drive may give “Windows cannot be installed to this disk x partition x” error.

To format the BOOTCAMP partition, select the partition in the list, click Drive options (advanced) and then click Format button. Click Ok button for the prompt.

Click Next button to begin installing Windows 10/8 on BOOTCAMP partition. Follow the on screen instructions to finish installing and configuring Windows 8. If you are new to installing Windows 10/8, follow our step-by-step Windows 10/8 installation procedure.

Step 5: Once Windows 10/8 is installed and running, you need to install Mac-specific drivers and other support software for Windows. The support software is on the same USB drive if you have selected Download the latest support software from Apple in step 2. Open the Windows 10/8 USB flash drive (that you have created using Boot Camp Assistant) and navigate to WindowsSupport folder and then double-click on setup.exe file to start installing all drivers and Apple Software Update.

If you are getting “Boot Camp requires that your computer is running Windows 7/8” error, then you need manually install all drivers and Apple Software Update. Open the Windows 10/8 USB drive and navigate to Drivers > Apple. Here you will find all Apple drivers and other software. Manually install all required drivers one-by-one.

If you want to install drivers for third-party hardware such as NVidia and ATI, you can find the required drivers under Drivers folder in the same drive. Good luck!

If you get Software you are installing has not passed Windows Logo testing message, click Continue Anyway button.

When you switch on your Mac, hold down the Alt key or Option key to see an option to boot into Windows or Mac. Good luck!

Boot Camp Assistant Installer Disk Could Not Be Found Dead

Hope this helps!

You can definitely include it in the repo! I know there are a few things that could be done better, especially around the timing and reliability of the scheduled task, so as I iron those out, I'll submit the changes for you.

We have about 13,000 Mac's, and I've been using Configuration Manager prestages that use a trimmed down version of this script as part of the task sequence. I had added an extra step in the task sequence right after this script to validate that it was done before moving on (secondary insurance), so I'll have to spend some more time verifying that the timing logic itself is working as intended.

As for invoking it, you can just call 'C:WindowsSystem32WindowsPowerShellv1.0powershell.exe' with the parameters '-ExecutionPolicy Bypass -File ' which will avoid having to change execution policy on the system.

I think Task Scheduler is the best way to run as SYSTEM due to the fact that many company policies or AV vendors view PsExec as a potential security threat. The SysInternal tools are great and could be downloaded, extracted, and used for this purpose, probably more reliably even, but adds complexity and more dependencies.

Boot Camp Assistant Installer Disk Could Not Be Found

Here's those tools:
https://technet.microsoft.com/en-us/sysinternals/bb897553.aspx