whyisappledoingthis wrote:
what would be the difference between using a DVD and a USB drive to install win10?
A DVD boot is different from USB boot, for example, the drivers being loaded to support either media are different. Also see the El Torito standard. A USB HDD is not supported, but a USB Flash drive is supported. With USBs larger than 32GB, new issues develop, for example, Windows installation on external devices becomes possible with 64+ GB flash drives. Anti-piracy issues crop up. To make money, M$ started Windows-to-Go.
All Macs support USB boot using GPT/EFI, but Windows uses (up to W7) legacy BIOS/MBR boot.
To support Windows booting on Macs prior to 2012, a USB is not used because the EFI code on these Macs does not support MBR devices as boot devices and the device discovery via EFI does not expose devices properly.
2012 Macs support boot using either CD/DVD or USB or a combination.
2013 and later Macs (up to 2014) support USB (or external CD/DVD for specific models, like MacBook Air and Apple Superdrives). The late 2013 models are the first UEFI models (EFI2.0+) which support EFI boots consistently across most OSes and eliminate the need for CSM-BIOS (BIOS emulation via EFI on preUEFI computers).
2015 and later models stop supporting any legacy BIOS/MBR and will only support EFI (W8+, W10). W7 EFI is fairly unstable on Macs, with Sleep/Wake/Hibernate issues.
Some USB manufacturers honor boot ability requirements, but generic no name USB drives do not, which is another issue with USB. Apple eliminated the whole USB method in 2015 and later Macs. Windows Repair can be problematic on some models without a Windows Installer.
Despite all Apple efforts to 'kill' CD/DVDs, an Apple Superdrive is till sold.
Recovery is another area. Apple supports network boot. W10 was expected to allow booting similarly from Microsoft servers, but they stopped at just providing ISOs. W10 in 2017 may change this.