Parallels Desktop for Mac vs Boot Camp With Parallels Desktop for Mac, easily switch between the most popular OSes and never worry about rebooting. Optimized for the latest Windows 10 updates, macOS Catalina and ready for macOS Big Sur (11.0) Run thousands of Windows programs on your Mac; Moving from PC to Mac is easier than ever. No, Bootcamp only supports ISO files for Windows 10 or later. This was tested on MacOS Catalina 10.15 Beta. Popup that appears if you try to attach an Ubuntu ISO file in Bootcamp. This link outlines a way to install Ubuntu as a dual-boot system on a Mac.
Double-click Setup.exe:
'Boot Camp x64 is unsupported on this computer model'
Double-click BootCamp64.msi:
'This installation requires elevated privileges. Launch the installer through setup.exe.'
Run BootCamp64.msi from an elevated command prompt:
'This version of Boot Camp is not intended for this computer model.'
So what gives? You need to pass the NOCHECK=1 option to the MSI.
I've seen guides recommending modification of the MSI files or other old information that did not work for me.
Open an elevated command prompt (click Start, type 'cmd', then right-click and run as Administrator), go to the the BootCampDriversApple directory, then run this:
msiexec /i BootCamp64.msi NOCHECK=1
I was able to install Boot Camp (and its drivers) under x64 Windows 7 on my 2007 Mac Pro (macpro2,1) this way.
Note that this is not required for all versions of Boot Camp. It was needed for version 4.0.4255, but not version 4.0.4033.
Install Linux With Boot Camp
Boot Camp Control Panel User Guide
You can set trackpad options that’ll affect clicking, secondary clicking, dragging, and more. Depending on your trackpad, you see only some of these configuration options.
In Windows on your Mac, click in the right side of the taskbar, click the Boot Camp icon , then choose Boot Camp Control Panel.
If a User Account Control dialog appears, click Yes.
Click Trackpad.
In the One Finger section, select any of the following:
Tap to Click: Lets you tap the trackpad to click.
Dragging: Lets you move an item by tapping it, then immediately placing your finger on the trackpad and moving your finger.
Drag Lock: Lets you tap the trackpad to release an item after dragging it.
Secondary Click: Lets you perform a secondary click by placing one finger in a corner of the trackpad and clicking. Choose the corner you want from the pop-up menu.
Under Two Fingers, select Secondary Click to be able to perform a secondary click by placing two fingers on the trackpad, then clicking.