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#1 |
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Bootcamp in Parallels or just Parallels?
Could someone please tell me which one I want to do and why? I'm so confused on which is the best way? I'm so confused.
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#2 |
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What model Mac do you have and how much RAM installed?
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2012 2.3GHz i7 Mini, 16GB RAM; 2009 2.93 GHz C2D iMac, 8GB RAM, 640GB HD, GT120 1.83 GHz CD Mini, 2GB RAM, 200GB HD; 800 MHz 17" G4 iMac, 1GB RAM, 120GB HD 32GB White iPhone 4S, 32GB White iPad2 |
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#4 |
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Depends what you want to use Windows for, but with that much machine you could dedicate 2 cores and 6 to 8GB RAM for the virtual machine and it's going to run pretty darn fast....fast enough for pretty much anything you'd want to do except hard core gaming or video rendering.
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2012 2.3GHz i7 Mini, 16GB RAM; 2009 2.93 GHz C2D iMac, 8GB RAM, 640GB HD, GT120 1.83 GHz CD Mini, 2GB RAM, 200GB HD; 800 MHz 17" G4 iMac, 1GB RAM, 120GB HD 32GB White iPhone 4S, 32GB White iPad2 |
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#5 |
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Gaming = bootcamp
Everything else = try it in parallels (so you don't need to reboot into windows)
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MBP (early 2011) - Core i7 2720 2.2ghz, Hires Glossy, 16GB, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB Mac Mini (mid 2007) - Core2 Duo 1.8, 2gb, 320gb 7200 rpm iPhone 4S, iPad 4 |
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#6 |
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I've read about booting parallels from parallels. What about that option?
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#7 | |
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Quote:
You can either use an existing Boot Camp partition with Parallels or you can create a new VM using Parallels.
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15" 2011 MacBook Pro, 2.2 GHz i7 Quad, 8GB DDR3, 1GB Radeon HD 6750M, 750GB HDD; 32GB iPhone 5
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#8 |
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Sorry. I meant bootcamp in parallels.
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#9 |
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OK, I think there are some terminology issues at play here. I think what you're asking is:
1) Should you create a BootCamp partition and install Windows there, or 2) Install Windows as a pure virtual machine within Parallels. With Option 1, you go into Disk Utility and create a BootCamp partition on your Hard Drive. Once created, this disk space can only be used for Windows. You then use the Boot Camp assistant to install Windows into this new partition. There really is only one advantage to creating a BootCamp partition. It gives you two different ways to run windows. You can run the BootCamp partition within Parallels (ie Mac and Windows running side-by-side), or at boot you can hold down the option key and decide to boot your machine directly into Windows. The main reason people might want to boot directly into Windows would be if you wanted to run PC-based games. My guess is that if you're not a gamer, you probably don't want to bother with BootCamp. There are some downsides, among them: it's a lot more work to back up your BootCamp partition. You'll need to use WinClone or something like it to make periodic snapshots, and you'll need to make sure the BootCamp partition is NTFS formatted. If you're not a gamer, you're probably better off going with the simpler option (2). Hope this helps. |
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#10 | |
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Quote:
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#11 | |
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![]() Bootcamp = faster windows performance Parallels = slower windows performance Bootcamp has nothing to do with Parallels. They are 2 separate entities.
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We are the iBorg. All your OS X are belong to us. |
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#12 |
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It seems you're not reading the replies thoroughly. lol
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15" 2011 MacBook Pro, 2.2 GHz i7 Quad, 8GB DDR3, 1GB Radeon HD 6750M, 750GB HDD; 32GB iPhone 5
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#13 |
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Lol I am, but another alternative is linking bootcamp WITHIN parallels. This gives you both options.
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#14 |
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Pretty much every reply about running boot camp and Parallels has been about running the boot camp partition within Parallels.
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15" 2011 MacBook Pro, 2.2 GHz i7 Quad, 8GB DDR3, 1GB Radeon HD 6750M, 750GB HDD; 32GB iPhone 5
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#15 | |
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However, bootcamp will consume more space. You need to pre-allocate it all and it is no longer available to OS X. A non-bootcamp VM can be thin provisioned (i.e., you tell it to use a maximum of 100gb, and if it is only using 20gb of its 100gb allocation, it only takes 20gb from OS X).
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MBP (early 2011) - Core i7 2720 2.2ghz, Hires Glossy, 16GB, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB Mac Mini (mid 2007) - Core2 Duo 1.8, 2gb, 320gb 7200 rpm iPhone 4S, iPad 4 |
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#16 |
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im sorry but this made me LOL hard
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2008 MB 5'1 2.0/8/500; iPhone 5 |
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15" 2011 MacBook Pro, 2.2 GHz i7 Quad, 8GB DDR3, 1GB Radeon HD 6750M, 750GB HDD; 
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