It didn’t work, because after the application created the USB drive, it made a partition and rebooted. The first one, was enabling the Boot Camp Assistant app to create bootable USB drives.
Still, I wanted a way to install it without the drive. I also have a MacBook Air which I successfully installed Boot Camp on with the use of an external drive. I’m not sure why it refuses to work, but I tried cleaning it with canned air, which improved its condition a little because now at least it 'swallows' the DVD and spins it – it just never recognizes it. I have a late 2009 27' iMac which has a built-in Optical Drive, one that is not operational anymore. Below is his version on how to get Windows Boot Camp, and thus, Windows, on your Mac. Alvaro is one of the many readers who left a comment on that thread. Editor’s Note: Previously, we published a post by Daniel Pataki on How To Install Windows on Mac when all else fails.