

There's a bit of setup required along with one prerequisite - you need an existing Windows computer or Windows VM. I then discovered this post - and well, this is the business. I searched the Winclone forums, and read most of their help docs - most of which ended with "some USB 3 disk enclosures work, and others don't" and that was it. In my case this resulted in the blue screen error of INACCESSIBLE_BOOT_DEVICE when trying to boot from the external drive in normal mode (although the installation _would_ boot in safe mode). The method involves allowing Boot Camp Assistant to create both the installation media, partition, and a working Windows installation on your internal drive, and then using Winclone to clone the Boot Camp volume to an external disk. I've read pretty good things about Winclone however, this route failed. Here's a link to an almost workable solution using Winclone. Have VMWare Fusion recognize the external Windows installation as a valid Boot Camp source, allowing Fusion to run the _same_ Windows installation as a virtual machine while in Mac OS X.Have my MBP recognize this drive as a boot option when pressing the option key at boot (turning my MBP into a Windows computer).Install Windows 10 Pro (build 1511) on an external USB 3 SSD hard drive.And so began my quest to see if I could achieve the following:



I also wanted to run a proper Windows machine (including developer tools) and 45GB wasn't really enough to do much. The internal drive on my MacBook Pro (Retina, 15-inch, Late 2013) has been getting a little full, and the Boot Camp partition was taking up about 45GB of space. )Ī success story is a nice way to start the New Year. Once the update was complete on the VM guest, it also booted fine from the EFI partition. Trying to install from the EFI booted partition results in the 'Cannot upgrade due to unsupported disk layout for UEFI firmware' error. It would NOT install when running from the bare-metal installation (option boot from EFI partition). **UPDATE**: Aug 05 2016: Surprisingly, the Windows 10 Anniversary Update (Version 1607) installed on this installation okay, although only via the VM (running under VMWare Fusion).
