No Bootable Device - Boot Camp

I installed bootcamp to my computer and allocated a 5gb partition for windows. I rebooted the computer with the windows xp cd in the computer. I went to setup to setup windows xp and the disc is an upgrade disc so it told me to put in the windows 98 disc which I had. I tried getting the disc out but I pressed the ejct button and nothing happened. So I reboot the computer using the eject disc technique (trackpad hold). I load up the computer and it says no bootable device. I tried putting in the macbook pro install disc. Did not work. Tried holding C and putting it in the computer. Did not work. Tried just putting in Windows 98. Did not work. Anyone know a solution?

yea i got that trying o install linux, you need to hold down **option**
took me a while too
also, i don't think you can install win98, bootcamp says either XP Home or XP Pro SP2

Similar Messages

  • No bootable device boot camp macbook pro retina 10.8.4

    Hi,
    I am reposting this under this community instead of under os x system software since it looks like there is no way to move posts to a different community. Anyway, just  bought a brand new Macbook Pro with retina display running 10.8.4. I  have always been a PC guy so I wanted to create a small Windows 7  Professional edition partition. I am using bootcamp to try and install  it but I keep getting the above no bootable device black screen when  boot camp restarts the mac to boot from the usb. My flash drive is a  Kingston Data Traveler 16GB. The kingston does not come with any of its  own software. It's completely blank. I have to use usb since I have no  optical drive. These were the three different ways I have tried so far.
    1). Using my older lenovo PC, I created an iso image of my windows 7 disc using one of lenovo's bundled software: power2go.
         Transferred it to my mac with the kingston and then ran bootcamp. - Failed
    2).  Used the windows 7 USB/DVD tool. Now when trying to do this, the tool  said that the iso I have is not valid. I searched around the net for  this problem and resolved it using another tool. Now before actually  using the tool to copy the iso to the stick I thought to myself maybe  this problem is why bootcamp failed. So I transferred the 'fixed' iso  and ran bootcamp again on it and still same result.
    3).  Actually use the win7 tool and copy the iso to the usb. Since I had  already partitioned the drive I didn't go throught the boot camp  assistant. I was going to install the support software later after I  could confirm mac could boot from the usb. I restarted the mac with this  usb stick plugged in and same result.
    Now  in all three steps I actually pressed and held the alt/option key upon  reboot and in all three instances there was no 'Wininstall' drive that I  could select to start the installer. All I see is the macHD and the  recovery partition.
    Doing  some searching there were some threads that discussed modifying the  plist (in the disk utility app I think) but to me that was only so  bootcamp could add in the option to create an install disk via usb.  Since that problem isn't there I didn't bother trying it. Maybe I am  wrong? Any other suggestions?
    Thanks in advance.

    Update: A user responded to the other thread. So the usb flash device that I am using is 3.0 and looks like there can be problems with that one. So the proposed a solution is to get an external dvd drive and try to install it that way. Perhaps a usb 2.0 stick might work as well. In either case I'll have to buy one. Will update this once done.
    The other alternative is to use windows through a VM.

  • How do I get an NTFS hard drive containing data to NOT show up as bootable in boot camp?

    Hi, somehow in the process of getting Win7 x64, Windows XP, and OSX Lion installed on my 1,1 MacPro, one of my data hard drives (NTFS formatted) has "picked up" a boot directory, boot mgr, etc. entries. It now shows up as a start-up disk choice in Boot Camp. Not.
    Should I:
    1. Just delete the boot entries and directory (I bet not)
    2. Use diskpart to remove that GPT partition (the boot partition) on that data drive
    3. Or do I need to use a partition tool to remove the bootable attributes? I would just ignore it, but it appears to be borking my Windows 7 start up occassionally.
    Thanks,
    Les

    Do you hear the drive spin up?
    You may want to contact the manufacturer and ask for a replacement power adapter/cord and see if that helps.
    Personally, I think there has been some damage to the circuitry inside the enclosure, which really can't be repaired.
    ~Lyssa

  • "No bootable devices" screen after Windows 7 Boot Camp failure.

    As a lifetime Windows user, I thought that it would not be such a bad idea to install Windows 7 via Boot Camp Assistant.  The process went smoothly until I reached the 3rd and final section of the procedure titled "Install Windows 7 or Later Version."  I adjusted the MacOS and Windows partitions and proceeded to the final reboot.  It is then where I was greeted with a Windows 7 screen tht stated something along the lines of "No bootable devices. Insert boot disc and try again."  I have tried the Boot Camp Assistant (Same exact steps I used initially) and have yet to defeat the dreaded No Bootable Devices screen.  I would really enjoy having Windows on my device so any help would be GREATLY appreciated.  Thank you!

    Hmm, I had an 8 GB flash drive connected to the compter at all times.  When just using the "Install Windows 7 or later version" feature, shouldn't the flash drive be conncected throughout the duration of the procedure?  And I may not be using the correct vocabulary but when I was referring to "adjusting the partitions" I meant the section of the procedure where the user selects how much hard disk drive space is granted to each OS.  The response is much appreciated!

  • Windows will not boot to my boot camp partition on a DIY fusion drive - gives "No bootable device found" error

    I have a MacBookPro 9,1 (mid-2012, non-retina) running OS X 10.8.2.  Here is what I have done to my system:
    Installed Windows 7 x64 Pro to a boot camp partition; installed all windows updates.
    Using WinClone, save an image of this boot camp partition.
    Removed optical drive and HDD.
    Installed HDD in place of optical drive.
    Installed SSD in place of HDD.
    Booted to recovery partition, installed OS X on a flash drive.
    Booted to flash drive, created fusion drive using [MacWorld's instructions](http://www.macworld.com/article/2014011/how-to-make-your-own-fusion-drive.html)
    Booted to recovery partition on flash drive.
    Restored system to fusion drive from a Time Machine backup. Unfortunately, it seems that because I never installed OS X on my fusion drive, I do not have a recovery partition. But that's an issue for another day.
    Using Boot Camp assistant, created a boot camp partition on my HDD.
    Using WinClone, restore my Windows installation from the previously created image.
    Now, Windows boots to a black screen telling me that it can't find a bootable device. I have tried a few things to resolve this, all without effect:
    I know that VMware Fusion has to prepare a boot camp partition in order to virtualize it, so I figured it might inadvertently fix things. Alas, while it *did* successfully boot my boot camp partition into a virtual machine, I still can't boot into Windows.
    I figured I'd just try to reinstall Windows. Surprisingly, my system booted to my Windows install disc, which was in my original optical drive (which I had put in a USB case). But, Windows refused to install, giving me a an error 0x8030024. It seems the solution to this issue is to disconnect all drives but the one on which you want to install Windows, which is something I would dearly like to avoid. It would be a pain, but more than that, I'm afraid it would bork my fusion drive, even if I'm careful to never boot to OS X with the SSD disconnected.
    A lot of places said that this error results from a borked MBR, and suggest using a tool like gptfdisk to rewrite it. I followed the instructions [here](https://discussions.apple.com/thread/4144252?start=0&tstart=0), but *that* didn't work either.
    I am now completely at a loss as to how to proceed, and Google isn't much help either.
    In conclusion, here is some information that you may find helpful:
        $ diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *240.1 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         239.7 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               134.2 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *750.2 GB   disk1
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk1s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         648.4 GB   disk1s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               650.0 MB   disk1s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP                100.9 GB   disk1s4
    /dev/disk2
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Mayfly                 *884.0 GB   disk2
    $ diskutil cs list
    CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group 63DC419F-1A09-4C5B-977A-F59F79502CA1
       =========================================================
       Name:         FusionDrive
       Size:         888087773184 B (888.1 GB)
       Free Space:   0 B (0 B)
       |
       +-< Physical Volume B1B14251-2DB3-491C-9E7A-5C2FD11881BA
       |   ----------------------------------------------------
       |   Index:    0
       |   Disk:     disk0s2
       |   Status:   Online
       |   Size:     239713435648 B (239.7 GB)
       |
       +-< Physical Volume D0BA2837-514D-4620-8E1D-26D18137CA94
       |   ----------------------------------------------------
       |   Index:    1
       |   Disk:     disk1s2
       |   Status:   Online
       |   Size:     648374337536 B (648.4 GB)
       |
       +-> Logical Volume Family 736A8900-FE9C-4342-A932-EDC35444774C
           Encryption Status:       Unlocked
           Encryption Type:         None
           Conversion Status:       NoConversion
           Conversion Direction:    -none-
           Has Encrypted Extents:   No
           Fully Secure:            No
           Passphrase Required:     No
           |
           +-> Logical Volume B4997853-59F8-4480-BB48-3481B2F2A123
               Disk:               disk2
               Status:             Online
               Size (Total):       884000030720 B (884.0 GB)
               Size (Converted):   -none-
               Revertible:         No
               LV Name:            Mayfly
               Volume Name:        Mayfly
               Content Hint:       Apple_HFS
    $  sudo gpt -r -vv show disk1
    Password:
    gpt show: disk1: mediasize=750156374016; sectorsize=512; blocks=1465149168
    gpt show: disk1: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: disk1: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: disk1: Sec GPT at sector 1465149167
          start        size  index  contents
              0           1         MBR
              1           1         Pri GPT header
              2          32         Pri GPT table
             34           6        
             40      409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
         409640  1266356128      2  GPT part - 53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
    1266765768     1269536      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
    1268035304         280        
    1268035584   197111808      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
    1465147392        1743        
    1465149135          32         Sec GPT table
    1465149167           1         Sec GPT header
    $ sudo fdisk /dev/disk1
    Disk: /dev/disk1     geometry: 91201/255/63 [1465149168 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE    0   0   2 - 1023 254  63 [         1 - 1268035583]     *2: 07 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [1268035584 -  197111808] HPFS/QNX/AUX
    3: 00    0   0   0 -    0   0   0 [         0 -          0] unused     
    4: 00    0   0   0 -    0   0   0 [         0 -          0] unused

    My setup is very similar to your's, Ryan, on a Mac Mini5,2 and the ordering is different and Winclone was not used.
    1. New Mini with internal 500GB with Mountain Lion(ML), put into an external FW enclosure, so the Mini can/could be booted using an external drive for contigency.
    2. Replaced internal stock HDD (500Gb/5400rpm) with SSD/HDD (256Gb SSD/1TB 5400rpm).
    3. Installed W7 x64 on 64GB partition on HDD, which was a single-partition drive to begin with.
    4. The remaining HDD partition and the entire SSD was put into a Fusion drive.
    5. Using Command-R, new ML installed on Fusion HD.
    Here is what I currently have...(Disk0 - SSD, Disk1- 1TB HDD, Disk2 - Fusion, Disk3 - External FW).
    diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *256.1 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         255.7 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               134.2 MB   disk0s3
    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *1.0 TB     disk1
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk1s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         934.5 GB   disk1s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Boot OS X               650.0 MB   disk1s3
       4:       Microsoft Basic Data BOOTCAMP                64.9 GB    disk1s4
    /dev/disk2
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Fusion HD              *1.2 TB     disk2
    /dev/disk3
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *500.1 GB   disk3
       1:                        EFI                         209.7 MB   disk3s1
       2:                  Apple_HFS Rescue HD               371.8 GB   disk3s2
       3:                  Apple_HFS Leopard HD              31.9 GB    disk3s3
       4:                  Apple_HFS Snow Leopard HD         31.9 GB    disk3s4
       5:                  Apple_HFS Lion HD                 31.3 GB    disk3s5
       6:                 Apple_Boot Lion Recovery HD        650.0 MB   disk3s6
       7:                  Apple_HFS Mountain Lion HD        31.3 GB    disk3s7
       8:                 Apple_Boot Mountain Lion Recove... 650.0 MB   disk3s8
    diskutil cs list
    CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group A8C00490-0E14-401F-AB69-59F37724E8C4
        =========================================================
        Name:         Fusion
        Size:         1190201270272 B (1.2 TB)
        Free Space:   0 B (0 B)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume 4772013B-5520-4801-9BE5-BCAEF4AEDAB3
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    0
        |   Disk:     disk0s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     255716540416 B (255.7 GB)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume A679A101-3C78-4A59-B5EE-A4339210CFAD
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    1
        |   Disk:     disk1s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     934484729856 B (934.5 GB)
        |
        +-> Logical Volume Family 5EF5C7CA-0B9C-4169-82A1-41C84F206672
            Encryption Status:       Unlocked
            Encryption Type:         None
            Conversion Status:       NoConversion
            Conversion Direction:    -none-
            Has Encrypted Extents:   No
            Fully Secure:            No
            Passphrase Required:     No
            |
            +-> Logical Volume 1512657C-ED13-4B31-82C6-7AECBBCA7F98
                Disk:               disk2
                Status:             Online
                Size (Total):       1185508581376 B (1.2 TB)
                Size (Converted):   -none-
                Revertible:         No
                LV Name:            Fusion HD
                Volume Name:        Fusion HD
                Content Hint:       Apple_HFS
    sudo gpt -r -vv show disk1
    gpt show: disk1: mediasize=1000204886016; sectorsize=512; blocks=1953525168
    gpt show: disk1: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: disk1: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: disk1: Sec GPT at sector 1953525167
           start        size  index  contents
               0           1         MBR
               1           1         Pri GPT header
               2          32         Pri GPT table
              34           6        
              40      409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
          409640  1825165488      2  GPT part - 53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      1825575128     1269544      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      1826844672   126679040      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
      1953523712        1423        
      1953525135          32         Sec GPT table
      1953525167           1         Sec GPT header

  • Boot camp: No bootable device -- insert boot disk and press any key screen

    Hello there!
    I recently upgraded my imac mid 2010 system with a SSD hard-drive. The old "main" drive went to the place of super-drive and after reinstalling OS X into the new drive and wiping the old drive a very interesting problem happened. I started trying to install windows 7 via bootcamp. I did everything what the bootcamp assistant says and after the imac restarts itself it just says No bootable device -- insert boot disk and press any key. Firstly I thought that maybe something is wrong with the installation disk (i have an external super-drive connected to the imac). After restarting the imac once again i held down the option button and arrived to the screen, where it shows the avlaible boot options (different disks). Now, what I saw, was funny. The bootcamp assistant had'nt created the bootcamp drive at all. Atleast it did not show it. After doing this two-three times the result was the same. My next idea was that maybe, there is an issue with the concrete SSD model I am using. So I went back to OS X and opened the bootcamp assistant and restored the state of the OS X SSD drive. Next I did an bootcamp partition onto the old drive I have installed. But the result is still the same. Now my head is empty of ideas.
    Has anybody had a similar problem and can you please give me tutorial what I did wrong or what to try next?
    Thanks.
    Indrek.

    Indrek,
    There is a Boot Camp forum, I'd suggest posting there because most of the Boot Camp and Windows gurus are there.
    Good luck.

  • Boot Camp not installing Windows 7 - "No bootable device, insert boot disk and press any key."

    I need some help with something. A while back, I put a brand new hard drive in my MacBook, a 500 GB model to replace the 120 GB one. I cloned everything successfully to the new drive via Carbon Copy Cloner, but now I want to make a Boot Camp partition on the drive. The SuperDrive in it is defective, so I use an external FireWire drive. So far the Boot Camp Assistant in 10.7 Lion works fine in creating the partition, but when it gets to the part where it tries to boot into the Windows installation disk (32-bit Windows 7 Home Premium, or could the 64-bit work fine as well?), it shows a black scree nwith "No bootable device, insert boot disk and press any key." I try pressing keys, but nothing happens.
    I also tried using rEFIt, but that didn't work out either.
    Here are the specifications of my machine...
    MacBook (Early 2009 model)
    2.0 GHz Intel Core 2 Duo processor
    4 GB of RAM
    500 GB SATA hard drive
    Dual-layer SuperDrive (defective, may replace it once I have the cash)
    NVIDIA GeForce 9400M graphics chip
    Mac OS X 10.7.2 Lion
    Can anyone help me out with this? Is there some sort of workaround?

    Wiley207 wrote:
    Believe it or not, it was the FireWire drive that was the problem! I managed to successfully install Windows 7 using an external USB DVD drive!
    Well I am truly staggered, I have tried this on two different MacBook Pros, with three different external USB optical drives. Don't know if you googled as I suggested but you would find hundreds of others who have found same thing. The exception is MacBook Air which works with the Apple writer, but I don't know much about this.
    Were you doing any of the special workarounds with refedit etc?
    What model USB DVD drive?

  • Boot Camp partition moved to external:"No bootable device found"

    I have just installed a new SSD, moved my old OSX partition to the new drive and am currently using the old hdd in an enclosure as an external hard drive.
    I can access all my files on my old OSX partition and my bootcamp partition when connected to my laptop. However, when i try to boot from my old bootcamp partition i get the "No bootable device found -- insert boot disk and press any key" message. That is when i boot from Startup Disk and target the bootcamp partion.
    When restarting my computer with the external harddrive connected and pressing the option key i only get "SSD" and "Recovery" as options, it does not recognize the external harddrive as a startup option at all.
    Is there anything i can do to use my old boot camp partition again? It worked perfectly fine before being external to the computer.
    My computer is a 2011 mbp with Mavericks, my boot camp patition is installed with windows 7.

    Microsoft requires that the partition for Windows be on an internal disk. It will not see an external drive as bootable.
    Allan

  • Boot camp shows 'no bootable device...' on restart

    Hi, have had my new Imac a week or so, late 2013 Intel based with new OS etc, working fine with the OS so decided to install Win7 using boot camp.
    The system in OS went fine, downloaded the drivers etc onto a USB stick, started the boot camp software, the Imac restarted but is hung at 'No bootable device--- insert boot disk and press any key' now the stupid amongst us would ask where the 'any key' is but you have probably heard that one before.
    I cannot reload Mac OS either, unless there is a secret key stroke sequence out there , is there ?
    I have an external drive which has been working fine for some time, a win7 64bit disc, which when inserted into the exetrnal dvd drieve does nothing, it flashes a couple of times but comes back with the same message.
    Good job I kept my trusty old Pc so I could post this
    Please help before I lose my sense of humour.
    Thanks
    Eric

    Remove all external devices when you try to boot. The system does not know which device to boot from when you have multiple devices (usb stick, external drive, etc.) attached. You only attach the device required for the specific step of the Boot Camp process you are currently performing.
    To boot back into OSx the key sequence is to press and hold the option key when powering up the computer. You can set the default boot OS after you get Windows working.

  • Help undoing Boot Camp Windows 7 install -- "no bootable device"?

    I think there's some residual stuff from a Boot Camp install I need help getting rid of. Let me explain what happened so you'll understand what's wrong:
    Ok so I set up Boot Camp utility to partition a 32 GB partition for Windows. I have a 250 GB hard drive, but when there were 32 GB in the Windows partition Boot Camp utility said that it would allocate 200 to Mac. I didn't really think of it, but what happened to the other 18 GB? Anyway, I tried installing Windows 7 (64 bit). After it installed, I was having trouble installing the boot camp drivers, so I decided to scrap Windows 7.
    I shut down Windows and turned on the Mac, but it booted into 7. Weird. So I restarted again, this time holding the Option key, to get into Mac. I went into the Boot Camp utility and chose to restore the Mac partition and get rid of Windows. So right away it says it's done, okay. So now I check the Finder and it says I have 70 GB used, but I remember before it was 60 GB, so I wonder where that space went. And then I check iStat Pro and it says like I have 60 GB used and that the entire hard drive (including free space) is only 230 GB. Weird discrepancy, because Disk Utility shows it as 250 GB again...
    So I restart the computer, thinking maybe it just needs to get its bearings. But it comes up with a black screen that says "No bootable device -- insert boot disk and press any key," and I'm thinking WHAT? So I power it off, boot by holding Option, and it only shows Macintosh HD.
    So that's my situation, Windows still seems to be on there somewhere, but Mac doesn't know it, and I don't know what to do. Right now I'm erasing free space (don't know if that will help), but if there's a solution to this PLEASE LET ME KNOW.
    I made a Time Machine backup before starting this whole process (thank God) so if I'm supposed to restore that in a particular way to get my hard drive back to normal or expect some things to not be restored or something please inform me.

    I "skipped" the erase free space after reading your message, but it was already partly done. When I tried turning off the Mac after doing that, it seemed to freeze before completely shutting off so I forced shut down...
    (I also opened the startup disk in System Preferences and clicked on Macintosh HD, I don't know if that made any difference.)
    I zapped PRAM and now it booted like normal into OS X
    So I looked into it, and actually the 70 GB seems to be in order (compared to the file sizes before backup, except for maybe a 400 MB Google Earth cache that seems to appear in my user library but not in the backup...) I guess iStat Pro and Disk Inventory X must just be reading in base-2, could that be it?
    Do you still recommend booting from the SL DVD to repair the drive? Does everything sound like it's perfectly back to normal, so I can feel safe about making more backups and restoring to it should something horrible happen without finding out that there's something weird and messed up with the booting or something?

  • Boot Camp "No Bootable Device" after OSX Partition Resize

    I have a MacBook Mid/Late 2007. I started out with a 500GB drive that I partitioned 100GB for Windows 8 in Boot Camp (yes, I know only 7 is officially supported, not the point as it worked fine.) I wanted to try Mavericks so I resized my OSX partition down 100GB to make a new 100GB Mavericks partition. After I installed it and played around, I noticed when I booted with the option key, my Boot Camp partition was missing. I thought i was becaus eI had too many partitions, so I deleted Mavericks and resized my main OSX back to where it was when I started. The Boot Camp partition still won't show up when I hold option on boot, but when I run Boot Camp manager on OSX it wants to remove it, so it knows it's there. It also shows up in the startup disks pane, but if I select it and reboot, I get a "No Bootable Device -- insert boot disk and press any key" message. If there a way to bring back Windows?
    Here's the kicker: My optical drive DOES NOT work. I installed Windows 7 off DVD long ago before it quit working and the only way I got Windows 8 on was through a downloaded upgrade. I know I should get it fixed, but I don't have the money (and I never use it, and this is 2 that have died on me in this laptop.) My system can't boot anything other than OSX off flash drives or external DVD drives (I tried, and I tried reEFIt, neither worked.) So I need a solution that doens't require a boot CD if at all possible.

    Nhammake wrote:
    I can get to  and boot OSX (it's what I'm using now as this is my only laptop), I just can't boot Windows. All my files show up fine on both partitions.
    You can't add/remove or alter the partitions if Boot Camp is installed, Windows will cease to boot.
    To fix it, erase all paritions except OSX. Start over, 2 partitions only (OSX and Boot Camp)

  • "No Bootable Device" after failed Boot Camp installation (Windows 8 - 1TB Fusion Drive)

    On my new iMac /w a 1TB Fusion Drive, I tried to install Windows 8 (still technically unsupported) using the following method:
    http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2012/11/no-support-no-problem-inst alling-windows-8-on-a-mac-with-boot-camp/
    Everything was proceeding just fine; I had Boot Camp copy all of the Windows 8 files (a legitimate, store-bought copy) to a bootable USB drive - a feature only available on new Macs running Boot Camp Assistant that don't come with an internal optical drive - and create a 102 Gb partition on the Fusion Drive. It then rebooted and was proceeding through the Windows 8 setup wizard as should be expected, but it couldn't modify any of the partitions on the Fusion Drive and wouldn't proceed. I accepted defeat and decided I would just wait until Windows 8 is officially supported before trying again.
    Now, every time I turn the computer on, I get an error message saying "No Bootable Device...", unless I hold down the Option key and manually select "Macintosh HD" (the only boot device listed). I already removed the primary Windows 8 partition, but it hasn't fixed the issue.
    I'm thinking that it's one of the 'hidden' partitions causing it to behave like this, or something wrong with the EFI bootloader, but I don't know how to proceed. Any thoughts on this?

    I actually did try this (forgot to mention it), and it didn't fix the problem.
    However, I just resolved it on my own, doing what I probably should have tried before anything else: running "Repair Disk" in Disk Utility updated all of the boot preferences as it should have.

  • While i installed windows 8.1 by boot camp there is message no bootable device

    while i installed windows 8.1 by boot camp there is message no bootable device and that was after i entered the code no of windows

    Is the current nVidia driver the one that came with Bootcamp?

  • I was using bootcamp assistant to install windows 7 via flash drive, i followed the steps, the Windows installation image was installed successfully and the boot camp partition was made andy mac restarted then i got this message "no bootable device insert

    "..no bootable device insert boot disk and press any key", i restarted my mac and held options and managed to log in to my OS x again but my windows wasn't installed and when i held options while my mac was starting the usb flash drive wasn't there, what should i do? Also can i restore my usb flash drive to use it as a regular flash drive again?

    Hi Michael!
    Yep, I did get this running. Not in a normal way (meaning the easy way). What I did, is that I just created the BOOTCAMP partition in OS X. Just let it format and create the partition where you would install BOOTCAMP.
    After that I discovered that via a ISO program (WinClone) you can directly restore a previously created OS X boot image to your current computer. So, I installed a blank Windows 7 to my macbook pro, didint install any drivers and just let it work up then. Then I went back to os X (in macbook pro) and made a bootimage for the BOOTCAMP partition. After that I saved it to my external harddrive and wired it to my iMac. In iMac I just downloaded the same boot-image program and restored the bootimage that I made in Macbook Pro to iMac. After that I made an restart and the bootcamp section with windows worked well with my iMac. Install the bootcamp soft and you can do everything and everything works. FYI, you get the windows working via those steps, BUT if you either delete or do anything to make your bootcamp partition unworkable then you will have to repeat those steps again. But it´s fast non-the-less, so it shouldn´t be a problem for you.
    If you didin´t understand anything or something doesen´t add up, send me a letter or a notification.
    Hope this helps.
    Indrek.

  • Problems with Bootcamp Assistant: no bootable device -- insert boot disk and press any key

    Hello Guys,
    I got a problem setting up Windows 7 on my recently bought 13" MacBook Pro (2,3Ghz Core i5).
    I used the bootcamp assistent to create a partition of 50GB on my Mac, everything is fine until now. I insert the Windows 7 disk and follow the instructions. But when I restart in spite of starting the installation of Windows 7, a black screen appears with a note saying "no bootable device -- insert boot disk and press any key". To exit this screen I then have to restart my Computer again, holding down the alt-key. In the following window I can just chose my Mac-Harddrive to boot from, the partition is not shown.
    I used the software actualization tool to update to version 10.6.7 which is the most recent one i think.
    The Windows 7 CD I use is actually a burned one. My University is a member of the msdn academic alliance and therefore offers me to download microsoft software for my work. I stress out that this is absolutly legal, I will only be allowed to use the software unitl I finished my studyings.
    So as I said, I downloaded the Version of Windows 7 Professional with Service Pack 1 (x64) on my computer and then burned on a DVD. I want to add, that the file I downloaded turned out to be an iso file. At first, I just burned this file on a DVD but since it turned out that i got the above mentioned message, I burned a second DVD with the actual files of the iso (with foldernames like autorun.inf, boot, bootmgr, bootmgr.efi, efi, setup.exe, sources support, and upgrade)
    I dont know if these details are of any relevance, but i guess it may be useful since I believe that the burning thing could cause the problems.
    I have already browsed the Forum for quite some time now, but I didnt find a case with the exact same problem that I have, so I decided to rather ask you for help now instead of killing my brain like I did before (and I dont really have a clue neither of Macbooks nor of Windows-Computers, its always try and error for me)
    I hope somebody can come up with some helpful ideas or a solution.
    If you need further details on my system or anything, please feel free to ask
    Thank you very much,
    David

    The Windows 7 CD I use is actually a burned one. My University is a member of the msdn academic alliance and therefore offers me to download microsoft software for my work. I stress out that this is absolutly legal, I will only be allowed to use the software unitl I finished my studyings.
    Apple Disk Utility won't do a proper job and won't work (and it varies, some can start the install but fails later) Has to be burned at 2X Reduced Burn Speed
    Also check the support articles for bootcamp
    Apple Boot Camp Support

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