Rufus Alternatives for Mac OS X – Rufus is the tool which is used to format and create bootable USB flash drives.Rufus also formats USB keys, memory sticks, and pen drives without any external files. Rufus is the most powerful application to flash a BIOS and UEFI bootable devices.
Active1 month ago
- Popular Alternatives to Rufus for Mac. Explore 8 Mac apps like Rufus, all suggested and ranked by the AlternativeTo user community.
- Short Bytes: In this article, we have created a list of the top 5 bootable USB tools for Windows operating system. You can create ISO files for different Windows operating systems, Linux distros.
- Our preferred tool for creating bootable Ubuntu sticks in Windows is ‘Linux Live USB Creator’ – often called ‘Lili’ for short. Including Rufus (Github link) How to Create a Bootable Linux USB Drive on Mac OS X.
My MBA 2012 with OS X 10.9.4 Mavericks won't boot anymore - it simply freezes after the initial jingle. I already tried resetting NVRAM and SMC, but to no avail. I don't have any time machine backups.
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However, I still have a disc image of Mavericks sitting on an external hard drive, a USB stick and access to a notebook with Windows 7.
I haven't yet found any tutorial on how to create a bootable USB drive on Windows in order to reinstall OS X on my beloved Macbook Air.
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
kinarikinari
8 Answers
Rufus Usb Tool For Mac
According to the first answer here, https://superuser.com/questions/383235/create-a-bootable-usb-drive-from-a-dmg-file-on-windows, there's a tool with a free trial called TransMac that can do it. Just make sure the USB drive is formatted with GPT and not MBR.
What might be easier, however, is that that model has support for Internet Recovery. If you boot holding Command-R and you have a WiFi connection, it can actually boot into recovery mode without a recovery partition on a drive (or even without a working drive).
Free antivirus software for mac os x 10.6.8. Having said that, your description of a crash right after the boot chime could signify a more serious hardware problem and you may not be able to boot anything. If you boot holding the option key down, the startup disk selection screen should appear. If it crashes anyways, you may be looking at a hardware problem.
Community♦
Michael D. M. DrydenMichael D. M. Dryden
I know this question is old but it is still valid. I was never able to write a Mac installer image to my Flash Drive and have it bootable, unless I did it on a Mac. Using Michael D. M. Dryden's Link, I was able to use the Diskpart command to clean and prep a GPT partition on a flash drive for an OSX Mavericks install image.
I used TransMac on Windows 7 to restore the image file I had to the Flash Drive, it created a bootable Mac image on my flash drive. Someone had reported that the method for using DISKPART did not work, but I have done this twice and it works remarkably well, and it's the only method I could find to create a Mac-Bootable Flash. I've been trying to post this to confirm that it works for some time, I just hope it helps someone else, because it is a very easy solution.
Here are the Diskpart commands used to prep the Flash Drive, just to have them here in case my Link does not work:
(Find the disk number)
Disk x is now the selected disk.
DiskPart succeeded in cleaning the disk.
Rufus
DiskPart successfully converted the selected disk to GPT format.
Note: I use 'Rufus' for all other USB writing and formatting for Windows systems, it's a great app, but I had previously tried to format the drive as GPT using that, as a Fat32 partition. When I tried to inject the image, Transmac told me that the drive was 'write protected'. So basically, the USB drive cannot have any high level formatting, the Windows system should detect the drive as 'not formatted' for this to work, which it will if prepped right with Diskpart.
![Rufus Tool For Mac Rufus Tool For Mac](/uploads/1/2/4/8/124851976/403146244.png)
Community♦
XweAponXXweAponX
I was able to do this with Power ISO on Windows but it cost me $29.99
-- I created an ISO from the original install DVD and then went to tools => Create Bootable USB..Selected the OSX imageSelected the USB drive to create the bootable image onSelected RAW mode
I popped it in my Desklamp iMac (DVD Drive busted from toddlers -- majority of OS was trashed by 5yo) and boom ready to install.
JoshJosh
I had this problem with a friend computer, it was an old iMac and I'll tell you it is not going to be easy.
The first thing you have to do is make sure what model you have (the year when your computer has been released) then check on the official apple website to see what is the latest macOS or Mac OS X version available for you computer.
In most of the new mac computer, you can just press cmd+r while booting and the mac will automatically download everything you need to install the system, but the oldest does not have this tool.
In this case, you have to download the dmg file, that can be found on the web, for example, one websites that provides some macOS and Mac OS X is this (for El Capitan, if you need another version, I'm sorry but you have to search for it).
Here things start to get a little tricky.
First of all you have to flash the image on a USB drive, I recommend etcher, that works on everything (Mac, Linux and Windows too) it's extremely easy to use and you just need to select the drive and the image and etcher will do everything by itself, plus it's free here.
When the USB drive is ready you can plug it in you mac and press alt (option) while booting, you have inserted a firmware password, it will ask you to unlock the firmware by inserting that password, else it will take you to all the bootable drives, including your USB device.
If you see the mac logo with a stop icon over it, it means that you downloaded a too new version that is not supported from your mac, else it will start.
When it start, it won't install, saying that the system can't verify the downloaded image, that's why you have to navigate on the 'utilities' menu on the top bar and open the terminal.
Now you have to choices, change the date & time, which can work, but may not.
That's basically because every image of mac has a certificate that can expire, so, if the certificate is expired you won't be able to make it work, unless you change the date (the date is different from mac version to mac version, so based on that you have to change it, usually just search for when was that version released and se the current date to that date or even one or two days later to make it work). Then try to install the system, if this does not work again, you can start the installation without verifying the image, but you should really trust the image you're using from being corrupted or modified (just to make sure the download went right, use the SHA-1 code to make the file has been downloaded right).
So, to proceed without verifying the image, from terminal, type in this command:
then, start the installation. (Is possible that you won't need the sudo at the begin, in that case just remove it from the command and start from 'defaults')
Now you should be able to install macOS from a USB drive..
Just a little thing, make sure to have formatted the disk before proceeding, I would recommend to make a partition that takes the whole disk in mac Journaled format, then if you want you will be able to encrypt the disk (the installer will ask you to do that later), instead, if the disk was encrypted before, you will have to insert the encryption key of the disk to continue the installation process.
Really hope this help, I spent a lot of hours to do this on a really old iMac from 2008.. and now it works!
Good luck!
The first thing you have to do is make sure what model you have (the year when your computer has been released) then check on the official apple website to see what is the latest macOS or Mac OS X version available for you computer.
In most of the new mac computer, you can just press cmd+r while booting and the mac will automatically download everything you need to install the system, but the oldest does not have this tool.
In this case, you have to download the dmg file, that can be found on the web, for example, one websites that provides some macOS and Mac OS X is this (for El Capitan, if you need another version, I'm sorry but you have to search for it).
Here things start to get a little tricky.
First of all you have to flash the image on a USB drive, I recommend etcher, that works on everything (Mac, Linux and Windows too) it's extremely easy to use and you just need to select the drive and the image and etcher will do everything by itself, plus it's free here.
When the USB drive is ready you can plug it in you mac and press alt (option) while booting, you have inserted a firmware password, it will ask you to unlock the firmware by inserting that password, else it will take you to all the bootable drives, including your USB device.
If you see the mac logo with a stop icon over it, it means that you downloaded a too new version that is not supported from your mac, else it will start.
When it start, it won't install, saying that the system can't verify the downloaded image, that's why you have to navigate on the 'utilities' menu on the top bar and open the terminal.
Now you have to choices, change the date & time, which can work, but may not.
That's basically because every image of mac has a certificate that can expire, so, if the certificate is expired you won't be able to make it work, unless you change the date (the date is different from mac version to mac version, so based on that you have to change it, usually just search for when was that version released and se the current date to that date or even one or two days later to make it work). Then try to install the system, if this does not work again, you can start the installation without verifying the image, but you should really trust the image you're using from being corrupted or modified (just to make sure the download went right, use the SHA-1 code to make the file has been downloaded right).
So, to proceed without verifying the image, from terminal, type in this command:
sudo defaults write com.apple.frameworks.diskimages skip-verify true
then, start the installation. (Is possible that you won't need the sudo at the begin, in that case just remove it from the command and start from 'defaults')
Now you should be able to install macOS from a USB drive..
Just a little thing, make sure to have formatted the disk before proceeding, I would recommend to make a partition that takes the whole disk in mac Journaled format, then if you want you will be able to encrypt the disk (the installer will ask you to do that later), instead, if the disk was encrypted before, you will have to insert the encryption key of the disk to continue the installation process.
Really hope this help, I spent a lot of hours to do this on a really old iMac from 2008.. and now it works!
Good luck!
Pietro De DomenicoPietro De Domenico
In my humble opinion, the easiest and a free solution for creating bootable drives is Rufus.
Jawa2,26755 gold badges1717 silver badges2525 bronze badges
user115395user115395
I've been struggling with the same problem but this works for me:
![Rufus Rufus](/uploads/1/2/4/8/124851976/145217178.png)
- convert the .dmg image with power iso to iso
- put the iso on a usb stick (drag it into your mac hard drive and mount it)
- format your usb stick with the disk utility tool. (Make sure the usb is partitioned as mac bootable then use use the image recovery and put your mounted OS X iso into the source and your usb as the location.)
- restart your computer while holding down the option key
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RedRed
You can create bootable USB drive on Windows using POWER ISO. You will be able to download a copy of old one version of powerISO by provided links this tutorial.
You need pen drive of more than 8 GB.
Makarand ManeMakarand Mane
I've tried many tutorials on how to create a mac bootable USB drive from Windows but none of them worked. So, I've come up with my own solution that worked fine with any DMG I've tested. Please find the details on my github page.
mihailmihail
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protected by Community♦Mar 28 '18 at 4:58
Rufus Tool For Creating Bootable
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This is a list of utilities for creating Live USB.
Overview[edit]
Adware Removal Tool For Mac
Multiboot means that the tool allows multiple systems on the USB stick, as well as a bootloader on the USB flash drive to choose which system to load at boot time.
Name | Developer | Licensing | Maintained? | Runs on (OS) | Target OS |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
FasterImageFlasher | Alan Kubiak | (None) | No | Windows | Windows 7, Windows 8, Windows 8.1, Windows 10 |
Rufus | Pete Batard | GNU GPL v3 | Yes | Windows | DOS, Linux, Windows |
Windows To Go | Microsoft | Proprietary | Yes | Windows | Windows 8 or later, Enterprise edition |
DasBoot[1] | SubRosaSoft | Freeware | No | macOS | macOS |
GNU dd | Paul Rubin, David MacKenzie, and Stuart Kemp[2] | Free software | Yes | Unix-like | Virtually anything |
Fedora Media Writer | Fedora Project | GNU GPL | Yes | Linux, macOS, Windows | Linux |
LinuxLive USB Creator | Thibaut Lauzière | GNU GPL v3 | No | Windows | Linux |
remastersys | Tony Brijeski | GNU GPL v2 | No[3] | Debian, Linux Mint, Ubuntu | Debian, Linux Mint, Ubuntu & their derivatives |
SliTaz TazUSB | SliTaz | GNU GPL | Yes | SliTaz GNU/Linux | SliTaz GNU/Linux |
SUSE Studio ImageWriter | Matt Barringer | GNU GPL v2 | Yes | Linux, Windows | Linux |
Ubuntu Live USB creator | Canonical Ltd | GNU GPL v3 | Yes | Ubuntu, Windows | Ubuntu |
UNetbootin | Geza Kovacs | GNU GPL v2+[4] | Yes | Linux, macOS, Windows | Arch Linux, CentOS, Fedora, Gentoo, Linux Mint, MEPIS, Mandriva, openSUSE, Slackware, Ubuntu ; FreeBSD , NetBSD ; FreeDOS |
balenaEtcher | Balena | Apache License 2.0 | Yes | Linux, macOS, Windows | Linux |
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^'SubRosaSoft Dasboot 2.0'. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 22 December 2013.Cite uses deprecated parameter
|deadurl=
(help) - ^'dd man page, Author'.
- ^'remastersys web page'.
- ^'License and credits of UNetbootin'.
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