For some reason, it is surprisingly hard to create a bootable Windows USB using macOS. These are my steps for doing so, which have worked for me in macOS Monterey (12.6.1) for Windows 10 and 11. After following these steps, you should have a bootable Windows USB drive.
You can download Windows 10 or Windows 11 directly from Microsoft.
After plugging the drive to your machine, identify the name of the USB device using diskutil list
, which should return an output like the one below. In my case, the correct disk name is disk2
.
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/* Ultra lightweight Github REST Client */ | |
// original inspiration via https://gist.github.com/v1vendi/75d5e5dad7a2d1ef3fcb48234e4528cb | |
const token = 'github-token-here' | |
const githubClient = generateAPI('https://api.github.com', { | |
headers: { | |
'User-Agent': 'xyz', | |
'Authorization': `bearer ${token}` | |
} | |
}) |
This is a compiled list of falsehoods programmers tend to believe about working with time.
Don't re-invent a date time library yourself. If you think you understand everything about time, you're probably doing it wrong.
- There are always 24 hours in a day.
- February is always 28 days long.
- Any 24-hour period will always begin and end in the same day (or week, or month).