additional instructions.doc

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Launch Boot Camp Assistant 1. Launch Boot Camp Assistant by double-clicking the 'Boot Camp Assistant' application located at /Applications/Utilities/. 2. Print a copy of the Installation & Setup Guide by clicking the ‘Print Installation & Setup Guide' button. 3. Click the 'Continue' button. 4. Select the ‘Create or remove a Windows partition’ option. 5. Click the 'Continue' button. Select a Hard Drive to Partition for Windows 1. Click the icon for the hard drive that will be the new home for Windows. 2. Select the ‘Create a second partition for Windows’ option. 3. Click the 'Continue' button. Set Your Partition Sizes 1. Adjust your partition sizes Use the nub to select a custom size Use the buttons to select the pre-defined sizes 2. Click the ‘Partition’ button when ready. Partitioning a drive usually takes some time, so be patient. When Boot Camp Assistant finishes partitioning your hard drive, the Mac partition will have the same name as the original unpartitioned hard drive; the Windows partition will be called BOOTCAMP. At this point, you can quit Boot Camp Assistant or click the 'Start Installation' button, and follow the onscreen instructions to install Windows on the BOOTCAMP partition.

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Page 1: Additional instructions.doc

Launch Boot Camp Assistant

1. Launch Boot Camp Assistant by double-clicking the 'Boot Camp Assistant' application located at /Applications/Utilities/.

2. Print a copy of the Installation & Setup Guide by clicking the ‘Print Installation & Setup Guide' button.

3. Click the 'Continue' button.

4. Select the ‘Create or remove a Windows partition’ option.

5. Click the 'Continue' button.

Select a Hard Drive to Partition for Windows

1. Click the icon for the hard drive that will be the new home for Windows.

2. Select the ‘Create a second partition for Windows’ option.

3. Click the 'Continue' button.

Set Your Partition Sizes

1. Adjust your partition sizes

Use the nub to select a custom size

Use the buttons to select the pre-defined sizes

2. Click the ‘Partition’ button when ready.

Partitioning a drive usually takes some time, so be patient.

When Boot Camp Assistant finishes partitioning your hard drive, the Mac partition will have the same name as the original unpartitioned hard drive; the Windows partition will be called BOOTCAMP.

At this point, you can quit Boot Camp Assistant or click the 'Start Installation' button, and follow the onscreen instructions to install Windows on the BOOTCAMP partition.

Dual Boot

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Dual Boot Mac OS X and Windows XP/Vista with Boot CampLast edited: 12/5/2008

You can have both a Mac and a PC on a single computer, using Apple's new Boot Camp software. Boot Camp lets you install Windows on your Mac in addition to Mac OS X. With Boot Camp set up, when you start your Mac, you can choose whether to use OS X or Windows. Boot Camp is a great way to consolidate the computers in your life and to run essential Windows programs that aren't available on the Mac. Here's how to set up Boot Camp to get a Mac and PC all rolled into one.

Note: Setting up Boot Camp is not a trivial task because it involves repartitioning your Mac's hard drive and installing another operating system and drivers. Block out a couple of hours for this project.

What You Need

Getting Boot Camp and Windows up and running on your Mac requires specific hardware and software. Here's what you need:

o An Intel-based Mac running OS 10.5 (Leopard) with all software updates installed.

o At least 10GB of free space on your Mac's hard drive.

o A working printer connected to your Mac (Not necessary if you have previously printed Apple’s BootCamp guide http://manuals.info.apple.com/en/Boot_Camp_Install-Setup.pdf ).

o A genuine Windows XP installation disk, which includes Service Pack 2 (Full installation, not upgrade software such as the one offered at e-academy).ORA genuine Windows Vista Home Basic, Home Premium, Business, or Ultimate installation disk (32-bit version only.)

Set Up Boot Camp

Before you get started, free up as much space on your Mac's hard drive as possible. Then back up all your important data, just in case. Do not skip this step! Finally, log on to your Mac as an administrative user (and log off any other users), quit all running applications, and if you're using a portable Mac, make sure it's plugged into a power source. Now it's time to get Boot Camp going.

Step 1: Launch the Boot Camp Assistant

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The Boot Camp Assistant is a step-by-step wizard, located in /Applications/Utilities/, but it can help you only as long as you're in Mac OS X, which you are not throughout this entire process. So the first thing the Assistant does is prompt you to print the 26-page user guide [PDF]. Experienced users may be annoyed by this seemingly unnecessary step, but because you'll be rebooting your system and making major changes, a paper copy of the guide is a comforting help along the way when the on-screen Assistant isn't available.

In fact, Apple's user guide printout is more complete than any instructions I could include here, so rather than repeat the instructions it already contains, I offer additional information not included in the official instructions.

Step 2: Partition Your Mac's Hard Drive

After you've told the Boot Camp Assistant that you want to set up Windows on your Mac, you come to the scary (and fun!) part: splitting your Mac's hard drive into pieces and setting Windows to install on one of those partitions. The Assistant will show you a map of your Mac's hard drive. Click the divider to drag it and set the size of your Windows partition (which will take space away from the Mac partition). Alternatively, using the buttons, you can split the drive equally, or use exactly 32GB for Windows, as shown.

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What size should your Windows partition be? Good question. This decision is difficult to undo later, so do consider a couple of questions before you decide:

o What will you use Windows to do and how much how much hard drive space will that take up?

o If you're using Windows just to play PC games, for example, you won't need much space (10-20GB will do.) But if you want to manage your photo library in Windows (which I do, with Picasa, because I prefer it over iPhoto), you'll need enough space to accommodate all your photos. It's impossible to know in advance exactly how much space you'll need, but guesstimate as best as you can. Also, keep in mind that you can attach external drives to add space in Windows. But remember: Files stored in the Mac OS cannot be accessed from within Windows without software such as MacDrive 7, so make sure you have enough space for all the programs and files you'll want in Windows.

o What format will the Windows partition be, FAT or NTFS?If your Windows partition is larger than 32GB, you will have to format it as NTFS, not FAT. Mac OS X cannot write to NTFS-formatted drives, but it can write to FAT drives. That means that a Windows partition greater than 32GB will be read-only in Mac OS. In general, FAT is considered less reliable than NTFS. (Windows Vista uses only NTFS, so the 32GB threshold isn't a factor if you're installing Vista.)

After you've chosen how to split your hard drive between Mac and Windows, click the Partition button.

Step 3: Start the Windows Installation

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With your partition created, insert your Windows installation disk and click the Start Installation button in the Boot Camp Assistant. Your Mac will reboot from the Windows installation disk and begin working. Two things to know when you're installing Windows:

o When it comes time to select the partition to format, be absolutely sure to choose the partition labeled C:Partition3 . Vista will list it as Disk 0 Partition 3 BOOTCAMP. One false move here and you could wipe out your entire Mac, so choose carefully.

o

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o If your partition is less than 32GB and you're installing Windows XP, you'll have a choice between the NTFS or FAT Windows format. NTFS is recommended, although FAT is okay, too. Whatever you do, don't select Leave The Current File System Intact—make sure you format the partition to NTFS or FAT.

Even though Boot Camp pre-formats the Windows partition, this partition can’t be used to boot the computer. You must reformat the new Windows partition using the Windows installer. To format the partition for Windows XP: Select an NTFS or FAT format:

NTFS—Provides better reliability and security, but you will not be able to save files to the Windows volume from Mac OS X.

FAT—Provides better compatibility, allowing you to read and write files on the Windows volume from Mac OS X. This option is available only if the Windows partition you created in Step 2 is 32 GB or smaller.

Important: Do not select “Leave the current file system intact.” To successfully install Windows XP, you must select one of the other options.

To format the partition for Windows Vista:Click “Drive options (advanced).” Next, click Format, and then click OK.

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Click Next.The Windows Vista partition is formatted using the NTFS file system.

Complete the rest of the Windows XP installation per the installation disk's instructions.

Step 4. Install the Windows Drivers for Your Mac's Hardware

After you're completely booted into your new Windows installation, eject the installation disk and insert your Mac OS 10.5 installation CD. Let Autorun launch Setup.exe, and follow the on-screen instructions.

If the installer doesn’t start automatically, browse the disc using Windows Explorer anddouble-click the setup.exe file in the Boot Camp directory. Follow the onscreen instructions.

If a message appears that says the software you are installing has not passed Windows Logo testing, click Continue Anyway. Windows that appear only briefly during the installation don’t require your input. If nothing appears to be happening, there may be a hidden window that you must respond to. Check the taskbar and look behind open windows.

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Important: Do not click the Cancel button in any of the installer dialogs.After your computer restarts, follow the instructions in the Found New HardwareWizard to update your software drivers (Windows XP only).

Follow the instructions for any other wizards that appear. Then you’re done!

You Choose

Now you have the choice to start either Mac OS X or Windows on your Mac. To make that choice when you turn on your computer, hold down the Option key and you'll see the two partitions you set up, as shown. Click the one that has the operating system you want to use.

Alternatively, if the computer is already running, use the Boot Camp software to restart in a particular operating system. In Windows XP, click the Boot Camp icon in the system tray, and in the Startup Disk tab, select Macintosh HD or Windows and click the Restart button to move into that operating system, as shown.

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To set the default operating system in Mac OS X: In Mac OS X, choose Apple ( ) > System Preferences. Next, click Startup Disk.

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Select the startup disk with the operating system you want to use by default. If you want to start up that operating system now, click Restart.

Using a Mac Keyboard in Windows

When you first start using Windows on your Mac, one of the first things you'll notice is that the Mac keyboard is different from Windows keyboards. It has a Command key but no Windows key; on MacBooks and iBooks, the keyboard has a Delete key but no Backspace key; it also has no Print Screen Key. The Boot Camp user guide you printed includes a complete table of Mac keyboard Windows action mappings, but the most important ones to know are the following:

o The Option key is the Windows Alt key. o The Command key is the Windows key.

o The Delete key is the equivalent of Backspace. To forward delete with it on built-in Apple keyboards (on your Mac notebook), use Fn-Delete. (External Apple keyboards have a forward Delete key.)

o The Windows Print Screen key is F14 on an external Apple keyboard.

For more documentation, user discussions, troubleshooting, and frequently asked questions about Boot Camp, see Apple's Boot Camp support section. Or Apple’s Boot Camp Manual: http://manuals.info.apple.com/en/Boot_Camp_Install-Setup.pdf