How to use Boot Camp without USB drive?

Hi
Trying to install Windows via BootCamp, I came across a real nuisance: where I am, the only way to connect to the Internet is using a dongle. When the dongle is in, there's no way to squeeze another USB plug next to it; hence I can't let BootCamp download support files straight onto a USB drive. Needless to say, if I insert the USB drive, I can't use the Internet...
Is there any way that BootCamp can first download those files elsewhere so that I can then copy them onto the USB drive once the dongle is removed?
In case anyone's wondering, I can't get hold of a USB extension cable either at the moment...
Many thanks for any suggestions!
M

use and usb hub they are plentyfull and comes with 2 to 7 and up usb ports
best get one which get ac power as usb have a limitation as to how much power it can provide

Similar Messages

  • How to use Boot Camp without an operating disk

    Purchased my iMac and received an upgrade to Snow Leapord a week later.  Have upgraded several times and now have Lion operating system.  Have never received an operating system disc.
    Used Boot Camp to partition for PC programs.  Boot Camp does not work properly without "insert operating system disc" being completed.
    Any one have an idea as to how to get a functioning partition without the operating system disc ??

    I suspect that you're asking about an OSX installation disc, not a Windows disc.
    There could be one of two issues here.
    If Boot Camp is asking for an installation disc BEFORE it's able to partition the drive, it's asking for your Windows installation disc. You should have one if you purchased Windows. You need to purchase Windows to use Boot Camp. I recommend buying the full version of Windows Home or Pro, not the upgrade version -- the upgrade is difficult to install for non-experts.
    If you're looking for an OSX installation disc, and, like me, you upgraded to Lion through the app store, you will have to go through a back-door process in order to create this disc. Here's an article on this. http://www.macworld.com/article/161069/2011/07/make_a_bootable_lion_installer.ht ml (I can't guarantee it works. I made a disc like this because I thought I needed it to reload from a Time Machine backup, but it turns out that Lion doesn't require the disc for this, so I never used it.)
    When I installed Boot Camp and Windows, I didn't need the OSX installation disc. I'm not sure why you would, in this process. It should only ask for your Windows disc.
    If for some reason you downloaded Windows from Microsoft instead of buying a package with a disc, you need to download the ISO version and burn it to a DVD. See this article on downloading the ISO: http://www.mydigitallife.info/windows-7-iso-x86-and-x64-official-direct-download -links-ultimate-professional-and-home-premium/ (Make sure you choose the ISO that matches the version you bought).
    Here's instructions on burning an ISO with Disk Utility: http://lifehacker.com/251758/mac-tip--how-to-burn-an-iso-or-dmg-file-to-disc And this thread on burning a Windows DVD in OSX: https://discussions.apple.com/thread/2039118?start=0&tstart=0 (Summary: you can use Disk Utility to burn the ISO, but choose a slow burn speed)
    Lots to read but that should hopefully help.

  • How to install windows 7 using boot camp and usb drive?

    Hey,
    I wanted to install windows 7 on my mac 10.6.4 and I only have windows 7 in a external hdd, so what can i do so i can install?
    Thanks in advance
    Ala.

    He's implying you can't. You need your original install DVD to install it on your Mac, just as you would if you were to install it on a PC.

  • I made a mistake. i installed windows using boot camp without os x lion dvd. what should i do? help pls

    i made a mistake. i installed windows using boot camp without os x lion dvd. what should i do? help pls
    Re: can i install windows for pc on my mac or do i need the windows for mac? 

    There is no Lion DVD. Start Boot Camp Assistant and select the menu item to download the Windows Support Software.
    Read and follow the Boot Camp Installation Guide. http://manuals.info.apple.com/en_US/boot_camp_install-setup_10.7.pdf

  • New Macbook Pro -- How to use boot camp?

    Okay, so, let me preface this by saying that I've had about 4 different Intel macs now and have installed windows without a problem on all of them. But this new Macbook Pro that I JUST GOT earlier today is really proving difficult.
    First question: I own both Windows XP Professional and Windows 7. I'd prefer to install with Windows XP, but whenever I used Boot Camp Assistant to install windows xp, the xp cd had trouble loading and I was never unable to install it. When I tried Windows 7, it worked perfectly fine. Is the new boot camp incapable of installing older versions of Windows or something?
    Secondly: After successfully installing Windows 7 Ultimate onto my new Macbook Pro via Boot Camp Assistant, I'm having some trouble loading the drivers. On my past mac computers, I had to load my Mac OS X install disc into my disc drive while on the windows partition and simply run the program "setup.exe".
    But now, when I do that, I have the option of installing mac os x on the computer (which I already have on another partition and is not something that I want to do) or installing some sort of dvd file sharing software or something? How do I download the Apple Drivers onto my Windows 7 partition?
    Thank you!

    Hi,
    Windows Xp and Vista are no longer supported on the 2011 MacBook Pros, Only Windows 7 http://support.apple.com/kb/HT4410
    As for the second part, are you really using the OSx Install DVD that came with your new MBP for the Driver installation ?
    The trouble you describe is usually shown when using another OSX disc than the machine-specific-one.
    Regards
    Stefan

  • Keep getting error occurred while formatting the disk using boot camp with usb

    So I keep getting the above error when trying to use boot camp with a USB drive. I have tried with more than one flash drive, all formatted to FAT32, multiple isos, both ripped right from a windows 7 ultimate dvd and downloaded, and I have made sure the iso was unmounted. I have also tried all different combinations of checking the options in the boot camp assistant menu. Any ideas on how to get this to work?

    I was mistakenly thinking of the Fat16 limit. That is my mistake.
    When bootcamp assistant failed to create the USB from my iso disk (with no explanation), I decided to experiment a little with the dd and cp utilities. dd failed, and cp told me the install file was too big.
    The install.wim on my iso is 4,351,019,025 bytes. So even if 4GB is the file size limit, it is too big. 4GB is 4,294,967,296 bytes if I recall.
    If I am still right about the file size, smaller editions of windows 7 would be able to fit on the flash drive, or people can have an actual DVD with windows 7 and install from there.

  • Installing XP using boot camp with partitiion drive?

    I recently re-installed Leopard on my mac, and i decided to partition the drive.
    Then, when I went to install XP using boot camp it said that it only works with 1 partition!
    Is there any way round this without re-partitioning my drive?
    I also have an ext drive now so maybe I could install it there, but that would be slower.

    I just tried to run the hardware diagnostic test, half way through, the screen started to flicker so much, I had to abort the test. Please help!

  • Using Boot Camp on External Drive

    Can I use Boot Camp to install Windows on an external drive, instead of partitioning the main internal one? I have an eSATA drive so I know Windows Vista will work on the external drive.

    Can I use Boot Camp to install Windows on an external drive, instead of partitioning the main internal one?
    Yes. Don't use the Boot Camp Assistant; instead, restart from the Windows Vista installation disk and insert the computer's original disk when the computer is started up into Windows.
    (44916)

  • How can I boot Cisco1841 with USB Drive instead of CF?

    Hello
    I need to boot Cisco1841 with USB Drive instead of Compact Flash but I don't know what should I do.
    I heard I need to format USB Drive with FAT and need to save IOS on the USB Drive.
    Before boot, Need to set config register ? I am not sure which parameter should I set config register in detail.
    Please let me know if there is URL describing thease steps from the beginning.

    http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/modules/ps6247/prod_qas0900aecd80232483.html
         Q. What sizes of USB Flash sticks are supported?
         A. USB Flash sticks are supported in 64, 128, and 256 MB sizes. No other sizes are supported.
         Q. Can I use any USB memory stick for this application?
         A. No. Only Cisco USB memory sticks are supported.
    Q. Can I boot an image directly from the USB Flash module?
    A. Yes. USB drivers have been added to rommon, starting with version 12.4(13r)
         Q. Can I format the USB Flash module on the router?
    A. Yes. You can format the module on either a router or a PC. You must  specify "FAT16 file system" as the file system for the PC format process  to use.
    If your setup satisfies above conditions you can get the router to boot up with the IOS on the USB flash
    If you are in ROMMON mode, use 'dev' to find out the name of the USB Flash (should be usbflash0).
    set BOOT=usbflash0:
    If you are in the router,
    boot system flash usbflash0:

  • How do you Install Win XP using Boot Camp without use of an optical drive?

    So I'm about at my wits end. I'm try to get Windows XP on my OS 10.5.5 MacBook Pro. I've run into what seems to be a bit of a dead in. Unfortunately my optical drive has gone stupid on me and won't allow me to get through the entire set-up. The Mac has know trouble seeing the Installation Disc. After my partition has been created and I click start Windows Installer, the computer reboots in a normal fashion up to when you get the apple with spinning progress wheel. At this point the screen goes black and I get a "-" blinking in the top right corner of the screen. I figure it's just trying to boot from Win Install disk but it just kinda sits there. So here's my question. Is there some way to boot this Windows Installation from anything else but the CD? I luckily have an image of the WinXP CD in about 5 formats. I'm going absolutely crazy because I had just Installed WinXP not more than an hour before I ran into this initial problem but wanted to change the WinXP partition to FAT 32 as opposed to the NTSC format I accidently used. I would really appriciate any help in my dark hour.
    System Info
    MacBook Pro 4.1
    Mac OS 10.5.5
    Bootcamp 2.1
    Windows XP with Service Pack 2
    HL-DT-ST DVDRW GSA-S10N
    System was just recently re-installed with fresh copy of a software and updates.

    Kirkdan:
    I really would like to help you and get your issue resolved in your dark hour as you said. I am afraid that I do not have good news for you. This is because the limitation put on by this entire process of installing Windows via boot camp.
    The answer to you question to install windows from any other medium other than your built-in optical drive is a NO. This won't work since once Windows begins to install then it will not have all the drivers installed to recognize the external CD drive (USB/Firewire) and installation will halt.
    Axel F.

  • How can I boot linux from usb drive and/or dvd drive on a windows 8 laptop please?

    Hi all,
    Could someone describe how to set my windows 8 laptop to boot linux from usb and or dvd drive step by step please? I have HP laptop. Thank you.

    http://www.cisco.com/en/US/prod/collateral/modules/ps6247/prod_qas0900aecd80232483.html
         Q. What sizes of USB Flash sticks are supported?
         A. USB Flash sticks are supported in 64, 128, and 256 MB sizes. No other sizes are supported.
         Q. Can I use any USB memory stick for this application?
         A. No. Only Cisco USB memory sticks are supported.
    Q. Can I boot an image directly from the USB Flash module?
    A. Yes. USB drivers have been added to rommon, starting with version 12.4(13r)
         Q. Can I format the USB Flash module on the router?
    A. Yes. You can format the module on either a router or a PC. You must  specify "FAT16 file system" as the file system for the PC format process  to use.
    If your setup satisfies above conditions you can get the router to boot up with the IOS on the USB flash
    If you are in ROMMON mode, use 'dev' to find out the name of the USB Flash (should be usbflash0).
    set BOOT=usbflash0:
    If you are in the router,
    boot system flash usbflash0:

  • How to use boot camp after using Parallels.

    I have parallels installed on my iMac.  How can I create a Boot Camp partition in order to use, without having to reinstall my MS Pro 7 and software?

    maybe the users in the boot camp forum will know: https://discussions.apple.com/community/windows_software/boot_camp.  wish I could help further.

  • How do I boot from a USB drive with Leopard using a Lion iMac?

    I'm looking to wave good bye to my MacBook Pro running Leopard and upgrade.
    However, I need to keep a version of Leopard so I can run certain Audio Units that won't run on Snow Leopard or Lion.
    I have made a bootable drive with Leopard on it, but I can't get it to boot on my iMac running Lion.  It boots fine using the MacBook though.
    What am I doing wrong here?  Is what I'm looking to do possible any more, or do I need to configure the drive for use with a Lion machine somehow?
    Any help would be very much appreciated...

    Clearly not supported by Apple but as an Engineer I would like to know what the barriers are.
    I believe that pre-installed Lion has extra disk partitions - probably for Utilities and software 'repair'. Having extra disk partitions is not new for Apple - they did it on some Macs long before OS X but these did not stop booting from other OSs or replacement with new single partition disks.
    I suspect there are ways of doing it but it would probably invalidate the guarantee and might require removal of Lion, disk format, partition and reinstallation of OSs. Even then the reinstalled Lion may not work. I suspect it is only a matter of time before somebody posts a low risk way of doing this.

  • Kernel panic when using boot camp assistant

    OS X 10.5.2 all updates. 65GB of free space.
    Installed Boot Camp Assistant from the OSX DVD that came with my MacBook(10.5)
    After installation of Boot Camp Assistant ran software update (no updates needed)
    Launch Boot Camp and after sliding the amount to use for the Windows Partition (15GB,20GB,25GB equal, doesnt matter the size I've tried them all) it will prepare for partition.
    Then kernel panic (dimmed screen with text on grey stating must restart computer)
    Once restarted the HDD has loss the space from the Boot Camp partition. I have run the Disk Utilities from the DVD to repair the disc.
    This has happened each and every time (5x).
    What is needed to use boot camp without causing os x to crash?
    I've also.. at each kernel panic sent the report to apple.

    All,
    I believe I have discovered a solution for this problem. It at least helped me out. And no, it didn't involve buying iDefrag. This solution is totally free, but it involves a bit of work. It also involves iDefrag. Confused? Read on:
    The problem is that the partition literally involves chopping off a contiguous block of free space at the END of your existing partition. I was clued onto this by trying to resize the partition with Disk Utility (which also failed with a kernel panic). The problem I was having was simply that, since I had all but filled my hard drive before this, I had data for files spread all over my hard drive.
    So what was I to do? There's no way to view where a file is physically on the disk. The iDefrag utility would do what I need, but cost $34. Then it hit me: what if I could defragment my hard drive manually? All I would need is an interface that shows me the physical layout of the data on the hard disk so I'd know which files I would need to either delete (or duplicate and delete). I correctly hypothesized that the DEMO of iDefrag would do this for me.
    So I began, identifying the last file before contiguous white space began. The goal being to carve out a good chunk of "white" empty blocks on the right-hand side. For those wondering about the Header file at the very end of the disk, don't worry. It doesn't seem to matter. For example, I see a huge file. The blocks take up half the screen. I select it and open the Info window and see that it's a digital video file from iMovie. The info window has a selectable file path. I copy it, switch to the finder and hit "Apple-Shift-G", paste the file path and hit enter and I am taken there. I find the file and do one of three things:
    1. If it's a file I want or need to keep, but it's a file I created, then I just duplicate it with Ctrl-D. Delete the original, rename the copy to the original name and empty the trash.
    2. If it's a file I want or need to keep, but the SYSTEM generated it, I'll need to enter my password as I duplicate it. Enter the password again as you delete the original. You will need to use terminal and the "sudo mv" command to rename the file to the original name (Sorry). Empty the trash.
    3. If it's a file I don't need, either created by me or the system, delete it and empty the trash.
    "But wait", you might ask. "Steps 1 and 2 appear to do nothing! If you copy the file and rename it to be the same name as the original, nothing is being accomplished!" It might seem like nothing at first, but the FILE SYSTEM created the new file at the EARLIEST possible contiguous free disk space. If you're like me, you freed up a bunch of disk space to make this Boot Camp thing possible. This is evidenced by the white "holes" earlier in the disk (earlier as in "more to the left"). The copy of your file used the earlier white space. Deleting the original turns the blocks white!
    Often your processes will create a lot of little files around the same place. For example, a World of Warcraft update might create a lot of little files at the same time. If you get to a point on the disk where it seems like a lot of files in the /Library/Application Support/ folder were created, just copy and paste the least common denominator. If you buy music once in a while, it might be your entire Music Folder that could be worth duplicating! No need to do it file-by-file. The important thing is that files to the right of the bar get moved more to the left of the bar, leaving with you CONTIGUOUS FREE SPACE at the END of your disk.
    Finally, after doing this for about an hour, I wanted to see how big a partition I could create. Originally I'd been trying to create a 20 GB partition. From my estimates, if I had tried to create a 9 GB partition, I'd have been just fine the whole time. But that's not enough to play Bioshock! When I finished I took out the ruler and measured the bar on my screen.
    The whole bar was 289 milimeters. The contiguous white space ended at 239 milimeters. That's 50 milimeters of continuous space. That's 20.9% of my disk capacity of 93.4 gigs. That, my friends, is 19.54 gigs. I created an 18 GB parition and voila, it worked fine!
    I hope this helps some people. It's definitely a wallet-saving venture at the expense of sanity, but there is a way to do this without spending money. Also, while I call this a sort of "manual defragmentation process", it's a bit of a misnomer. While it is freeing up the blocks at the end of the drive, it is possible (or likely) that this process will seriously fragment your drive. After doing this, it may be worth the investment to buy iDefrag so they can really get your file system in order. But at least this'll get Boot Camp running.
    Regards,
    Tristan
    www.theblowmedown.com

  • Is it possible to install windows 7 on my macbook from a removable hard drive using boot camp? How would I do this?

    Is it possible to install windows 7 on my macbook from a removable hard drive using boot camp?
    How would I do this?

    If you have Lion installed, and run Boot Camp, it will create the boot flash for you, just followe the tutorial on screen. As far as I remember, this was not possible prior to Lion.

Maybe you are looking for

  • Acrobat 9 Pro and straight .swf to PDF conversion

    I have an electronic document that is several .swf files, one file for each document page. Using cutepdf I can put each file in firefox and then print the the page to pdf. This is very tedious since I have 1000+ pages. I would prefer to speed this pr

  • BPM Attachment server URL is always 127.0.0.1

    Hi, my name is Dmitry and my issue is the foolowing: I have a huge BPM application (BPM Suite 11g, Weblogic 10.3.6) with customized ADF forms. Each form has attachments tab which has standard attachment implementation taken from auto-generated form.

  • Quicktime 7.5.5 Crashes (iMovie 6.0.4 related?)

    i have been having major problems with quicktime 7.5 -- and now with the upgrade to 7.5.5. i have no problem using the iMovie expert settings to export a QT .mov that can be uploaded and viewed perfectly through Firefox, but when i try and open the f

  • AOL stopped working in iPhoto

    I have a friend who has been using AOL to mail photos from iPhoto. In the last few days, it's reverted to Mail. He went to Preferences to change it back to AOL and found everything grayed out except Mail. He has reinstalled AOL, but it did no good. (

  • IPhoto '09 version 8.0.3 released today

    *Back up* and upgrade - mine went fine http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3532 http://support.apple.com/downloads/iPhoto8_0_3Update http://support.apple.com/downloads/iLifeSupport_9_03 http://support.apple.com/downloads/DigitalCamera_RAW_Compatibility_Upd