Windows Bootcamp For Mac Windows 10 Education Not Working

Windows Bootcamp For Mac Windows 10 Education Not Working 3,7/5 9744 reviews

TL;DR: How in the heck were you able to install Windows 10 on a 2018 MacBook Pro w/Touchbar / Thunderbolt 3? ​ Just got a new 2018 MacBook Pro 15' with the fast processor, 2 TB SSD, etc. Trying to install Windows 10 Pro or Education (both version 1703) via Boot Camp Assistant and everything seems to go well until the last stage of Windows setup when I get the following message: 'Windows could not update the computer's boot configuration. Acrobat for mac trial. Installation cannot proceed.'

Dismissing the error message restarts the MacBook but it just sits at the white Apple logo on the black screen until I manually reboot it and zap the PRAM (Command + Option + P + R). Once I'm back in MacOS High Sierra, I can run BCA again to remove the Boot Camp partition.

Jul 31, 2015 - Yes, Windows 10 can run on a Mac, but it's early days and driver issues. Users have been able to install Windows on a Mac for years,. I have installed Windows onto my previous MacBook Pro by myself without issue, however this new MacBook Pro is proving quite troublesome. That being said, here is the problem: GOAL: Use BootCamp to Install Windows 10 Education onto MacBook Pro (15-inch, Mid 2012) My mac is supported under list of Windows 10 supported Macs. Pre-BootCamp Steps. What add in are available for excel 2011 for mac.

Mac

I've tried this with versions 1709 and 1803 of Windows 10 Pro/Edu but those completely screw up the partition tables so I to repair them (via LonerT's submission halfway down the page at this link: ). I've also tried various recommendations found around the interwebs including zapping the PRAM a few times, erasing the Mac hard drive, restoring MacOS, etc. All to no avail.

Since it appears that a few people on this thread have 2018 MacBook Pros running Windows at the hardware level, my question is (questions are): What is the magic used to get Windows to install on a 2018 MacBook Pro?! Did you use Boot Camp Assistant or did create a partition (what method did you use) and install Windows via separate bootable media? Any driver issues following a manual install? Any other downsides/caveats to manual installs? If anyone got Windows 10 installed on their 2018 MacBook Pro (either via BCA or manual install) could you provide a semi-detailed rundown of what you did to get it to work, including any work-arounds you needed to do. That would not only help me but others that will likely run into the same (or similar) issues.

​ Thanks in advance! Okay, here's the promised follow-up. A big 'THANK YOU' to @DryaNcs! The mention of downloading the ISO from Microsoft's creation tool is the key. As Apple's Boot Camp instructions state (), download the Windows 10 ISO from. This link will create a custom ISO that will work with whatever Product Key you have for Windows 10 (Pro, Enterprise, Education, etc.); essentially a universal ISO. This is what worked for me (and DryaNcs, apparently).

​ I think my original issue was overthinking the solution. Having 40 years of experience working with computers (30 of those as a professional in the industry) I've seen too many instances where Microsoft ISOs of a particular edition/source would only accept Product Keys intended for that edition/source.