My last Mac was a Classic. I recently bought a MacBook Air 13-inch Early 2015 with 256 Gb. In MacOS Sierra (10.12.5) I started Book Camp Assistant (6.1.x) to install a pre-downloaded Win10 64-bit Anniversary edition (with plan to update within Win10 to the latest Creator version).
Now everything seemed to go smoothly. Win10 got installed and booted OK. But first thing I noticed was no WiFi. After lots of googling I realized Boot Camp should have kicked in within Windows and installed some drivers. I searched for evidence of Boot Camp Utility but none was found. I also couldn't find bookcamp.msi or other executables. There's no Apple Software Update, either. Indeed I can't seem to find any evidence that Apple has installed anything.
Apr 07, 2020 I have downloaded the ISO file of Windows 10 but every time I start up the Boot Camp Assistant, it say 'The installer disc could not be found.' I want to download Boot Camp into my internal flash drive. I have 2 flash storages in this computer 250 GB flash storage and a 1 TB SATA disk. Feb 01, 2019 Sufficient free disk space: Using a Boot Camp install of Windows 10 requires a lot of free hard disk space so that the drive can be partitioned to run Windows along with Mac OS, you will need a minimum of 64GB or so for Windows alone, and you’ll obviously want to maintain plenty of space for Mac OS too. If you have a smaller hard drive on the Mac, or your hard drive is frequently running out of. BOOT CAMP SUPPORT DOWNLOADS DIRECT LINKS FROM APPLE. If you own a Mac and you wanted to install Windows on it to run maybe some Windows software or games, Apple makes it possible by releasing Windows drivers which will allow Windows to run on your Mac computer. Feb 15, 2014 Boot Camp is a Mac OS X utility that lets you run Windows on your Mac without relying on virtual machines or crippled emulators. Boot Camp supports Windows XP. You should download Boot Camp. Aug 27, 2011 This is the Windows driver package Lion's Boot Camp Assistant downloaded for my MacBook Air. I believe they should work on any Mac capable of running Lion (any Intel Mac with a 64-bit CPU).
I did get WiFi to work after manually installing a Broadcom driver but I very much would like to have Boot Camp within Windows. After more googling, it seems Apple no longer releases Boot Camp 6 files. And the latest Boot Camp Assistant (6.1.x) within Sierra seems to have been dumbed down. There's now only a button to restore back to a MacOS-only state, and no obvious way to download Boot Camp drivers and install manually. How to write a program using dev c++.
All in all, not a very smooth experience! A bit disappointing, I might say, after years away from the Mac world.
Anyone with similar experiences? Should I just try the whole process again (i.e. re-install Win10) and hope for the best? Of course, I COULD try to get Win10 working without Boot Camp but I'd rather not to.
MacBook Air, macOS Sierra (10.12.5), (13-inch, Early 2015) What kind of auto tune do rappers use.
Posted on