![]() Workaround phase #2: Once Windows 7 is working, install the Windows support files installer from the separate USB drive. Make sure you also create a separate Windows support files USB drive in BootCamp Assistant. Since you are aiming for Windows 10 you don't need a Windows 7 key, just skip the product key input. With the converted ISO Windows 7 installs just fine on the old Air. It says it's for Windows 10 ISOs but it works for Windows 7 as well. Nice guy Tim Perfitt has made a Mac application that will do that for you - you feed it a Windows installation ISO and will get one back that can be copied to a FAT partition. Workaround phase #1: There's a built-in hack in FAT where you can split large files into chunks and fool the computer it's still one large file. Problem is that Windows 7 also has an installation file bigger than 4 GB. Wrong approach #3: Let's install Windows 7 and upgrade from there! Download High-Sierra (not that easy on a newer Mac since the Apple site will just redirect you endlessly, but direct links can be found on Google). The drivers for the newer Mac doesn't work on the old Air. Turns out the Bootcamp Assistant installs drivers for the specific Mac hardware where it's run. Installing Windows 10 on the MacBook Air kind of seems to be working, but it freezes frequently and/or blanks the screen and the installation can't complete. But you have a newer Mac with Mojave and use that to create the Windows installation USB drive. Mojave doesn't install on your 2011 Air (it won't go higher than High Sierra). Wrong approach #2: In Mojave and later Bootcamp uses exFAT. There is no way of pre-formatting the USB drive with exFat or making Bootcamp use anything else than FAT. However, the Bootcamp Assistant formats the drive using regular FAT and one of the Windows installation files is larger than 4 GB. However, after a while copying files the process fails saying the USB drive is out of space. The Bootcamp assistant happily downloads Windows support files, formats the USB drive and copies Windows installation files. So you download i Windows 10 ISO, get your reasonably large USB drive and get started. The Bootcamp of those versions actually don't care which version of Windows you try to install. Wrong approach #1: Your Air has Yosemite or older. Here's the full story (you can skip it and just read the instructions): The question is how to do the installation. ![]() ![]() On macos | windows | macbook air Install Windows 10 on a MacBook Air 2011Īpple doesn't officially support installing Windows 10 on MacBook Airs older than 2012.
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