
Also, since many Macs include SD card readers, a large capacity SD card could be used instead of a USB drive as well. When considering the requirements, particularly the flash drive size and speed, I recommend accommodating a minimum of 8 GB per OS X installer and preferably supporting USB 3.0 specification for faster file transfers as opposed to USB 2.0, which will work admirably, but slower.

#HOW TO CREATE AN OS X BOOT DISK INSTALL#

Below is a solution to ease the load by providing access to any versions of OS X in one small, easy-to-carry, bootable flash drive. Unfortunately, business operations often dictate a different method than that, leaving it up to IT to bridge the gaps caused by fragmentation between multiple OS, hardware, and software instances.įor IT staffers, there’s seemingly no end to the number of tools they must carry with them, doubly so if they provide mobile support. In an ideal world, sysadmins everywhere would only need to manage one or two operating systems–one desktop, one server–and nothing else. Jesus Vigo reviews the process to create a mutliboot USB drive used to install multiple versions of OS X.

#HOW TO CREATE AN OS X BOOT DISK HOW TO#
How to create an OS X multiboot USB install drive
