How do i set up a dual boot with windows

I am trying to set up a dual boot system with both the snow leapard and win 7,  I have partioned the drive and have windows booting up.  How do I get the drivers for the machine that windows will recognize.  I am researching this for my dad his I mac is one of the new 21 inch models.

If you want dual boot you would use Boot Camp which is built into Snow Leopard. You will need a license of WIndows 7. You can install it by using Boot Camp Assistant however prior to doing so you probably should look at how it's correctly done, here is a You Tube Boot Camp instructions video I would recommend you watch first.
If your dad wants to run Windows 7 & OS X simultaneously then he will need either Parallels or VMWare Fusion. Both are virtualization applications that allow one to run Windows and OS X side by side. This is a great solution unless he is a gamer or needs to run graphics intensive applications like CAD/CAM or 3D Games or anything that is 3D intensive. For all other types of applications virtualization is an excellent solution.
If you choose the Boot Camp solution there is a forum specifically for that which is where I'd recommend posting questions.
Roger

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    ivokosir wrote:It may be that you didn't install os-prober before running grub-mkconfig. This happened to me once, I hope I'm not too late to warn you.
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    Thank you Paul. I understad  I just have one more question:
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  • HP Envy 700-430qe DT CTO - - - Trying to dual boot with Windows 7

                                                                                                       HELP HELP HELP
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  • Dual booting with windows 7

    Long story short, I wanted to try out arch, unfortunately, since I already have my laptop running a gentoo installation that has been months in the making and I doon't want to give that up, and my desktop also needs to run windows so that my parents can use it, I'm forced into a situation in which I need to dual boot and so far, I have been having problems since this is my first time manually setting up a dual boot. I think that I figured it out, but I wanted to make sure.
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    I decided to just start from scratch. So right now win is installing. My current partition scheme is:
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  • Dual Booting With Windows 8?

    So, I found this guide: http://www.neuraladvance.com/2012/11/17 … -uefi-lvm/. While I've ran and used Arch before a few times, it's been a while.
    The problem is that the guide decides to use the Windows 8 partition itself to install Arch; what I would like to do is use my own partition for Arch, making it as independent as possible from Win8, and both booted with Grub. I've already wiped everything and reinstalled Windows 8 first, however I'm a bit confused as to how to properly setup a UEFI partition. Period. Are there any good guides on how to do this? The Dual Boot article on the wiki, unfortunately, wasn't very helpful in my case.
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    holland01 wrote:
    So, I found this guide: http://www.neuraladvance.com/2012/11/17 … -uefi-lvm/. While I've ran and used Arch before a few times, it's been a while.
    The problem is that the guide decides to use the Windows 8 partition itself to install Arch; what I would like to do is use my own partition for Arch, making it as independent as possible from Win8, and both booted with Grub.
    By "the Windows 8 partition," it appears that you're referring to the EFI System Partition (ESP) that Windows created -- /dev/sda1 in the referenced guide. I've only skimmed the article, but I didn't notice any reference to using any actual Windows partitions in it. Note that the ESP doesn't really "belong" to any one OS; it definitely is not a Windows partition. It is, as its name suggests, a partition that "belongs" to the EFI. It's meant to be shared across OSes.
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  • How to dual boot with Windows 8.1 and Arch?

    Hello everyone,
    I've been looking into using Linux as my daily driver since having some experience with it on a server. After some digging around, I think Arch Linux is the best distro for me, now onto where I am.
    I'm currently running Windows 8.1 (updated from Windows 8, which updated from Windows 7) on a Dell Inspiron 15R SE laptop, I want to dual boot Arch Linux with it. I've looked at the wiki and I'm still not entirely sure what to do.
    Can anyone give me a quick list of steps of what to do to dual boot this? I've dual booted Ubuntu in the past and it was really simple because an installer did it all.
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    stqn wrote:
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    Your disk is already partitionned so you don’t have to choose between GPT or MBR, the choice is already made.
    You don’t partition “C:”, that is the name of a Windows partition. You partition a drive.
    Grub or syslinux, use whatever the beginners guide tells you to. Personally I think syslinux is simpler which is why I’m using it (but I’m not dual-booting, if that matters).
    You’re not saying what your problem is with partitionning, so it’s hard to help.
    Thanks for getting back to me, I'm not sure if I just create one large partition for Archlinux or if I have to create multiple? Where I'm also confused is with the Creating Filesystems part of the guide. I don't understand how I'd do this in Windows, or what /dev/sda1 is referring to.
    As for the bootloader part, the Beginner's Guide gives you a choice between syslinux and grub, what I'm not sure about is which to use considering I'm dualbooting. How it will affect my windows bootloader, do I disregard that and use GRUB now? I'm unclear on how that works.
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    Last edited by Expi1 (2014-03-06 19:54:30)

  • Dual Boot with Windows Vista

    Hi
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  • Dual boot with Windows 7 and LINUX - Tecra A11 (PTSE1A-00L005)

    Hi,
    I bought a new Tecra A11 Laptop which runs WIN7 Pro. I want to install LINUX also. That means, I want to run my laptop in dual boot Win7 Pro/LINUX (any distributor). Please tell me how to do that.
    There are 5 partitions on the HDD:
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    2. Active Primary C: Boot 145.04 Gb (NTFS)
    3. Active Logical E: 78.13 Gb (NTFS)
    4. Active Logical F: 64.25 Gb (NTFS)
    5. Primary Partition 9.2 Gb (no drive letter, application unknown)
    Hey, I need it badly, because I have admitted to a course of RHCE (Red Hat Certified Engineer)
    Please help me

    Hi
    I may not be able to give You a step-by-step explanation but most distros today offer a possibility to co-exist with Windows.
    During the installation the unused free space will be taken by Linux (with the consent of the user of course!!)
    What exact setup is needed by You is impossible for anyone else to say, but I would suggest to make the space occupied by the F drive available for Linux.
    You seem to have space enough for Windows and the Linux OS does not need much.
    Some thoughts concerning your partition setup:
    I would NOT touch 1,2 and 5 no matter what. They are your system and some system internal partitions (recovery environment and data) and would not be fun to lose.
    1. Active, Recovery partiton 1.46 Gb (no drive letter)
    2. Active Primary C: Boot 145.04 Gb (NTFS)
    3. Active Logical E: 78.13 Gb (NTFS)
    4. Active Logical F: 64.25 Gb (NTFS)
    5. Primary Partition 9.2 Gb (no drive letter, application unknown)
    So pick a Distro (my suggestion Ubuntu, Mint, Fedora, OpenSuse - Fedora will be the one closest related to RedHat) which will guide You through the steps to allocate space for Linux.
    I would suggest however to remove the drive F in Windows so Linux does not start resizing all partitions.
    I am sure that will work fine, but will just take time and the pretty unnecessary F drive will most surely be kept.
    If You already have valuable data on your unit, make sure to back it up!! No software comes with warranties :)
    Last but not least - make 100% sure to create a recovery set with the help of Toshiba Recovery media creator BEFORE you start installing Linux.
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  • Simple UEFI GPT Dual boot with windows 8 boot partition question.

    Hi everyone,
    I think it's obvious from the quuestion that I'm a newbie here (and from the location of the post) but I have read (several times):
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/UEFI
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/UEFI_Bootloaders
    and the incredibly helpful:
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginner%27s_Guide
    along with many forum posts. unfortunately this:
    https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Wi … _Dual_Boot
    appears out of date and so I need to ask you fine people my question.
    If I want to dual boot Arch with my Windows 8 my question is on the boot partition. I have an existing windows EFI boot partition. should I mount this partition to my "/mnt/boot/efi" folder and then copy the files to this partition when I am setting up rEFInd (my chosen bootloader from wiki page, comments/suggestions are welcome) or should I setup a separate boot partition for my arch installation. I assume from reading about rEFInd that the former is how I should do it as this seems to be how refind would be able to "see" my windows bootloader.
    The reason I am double checking and asking here is I know that windows can be a temperamental beast and is very prone to not booting so I don't want to mess with the windows boot partition unduly.
    Thanks in advance guys, looking forward to getting my arch working!
    Last edited by crashandburn4 (2013-03-03 13:42:43)

    $esp = EFI System Partition?
    also, ok, gummiboot, I'm glad I can mount the esp as /boot (that was my original thought but reread the tutorial and wasn't sure) just double checking, it is the esp created by windows 8 that I mount?
    in addition, as I am slightly new to this is there any tutorial that can tell me how to set up gummiboot? I've looked here:
    http://freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/gummiboot
    but don't see anything in the way of detailed instructions.
    from your post: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=159061
    I'm gonna guess it's something like this (please let me know if this is right)
    /mount $ESP /mnt/boot
    pacman -S gummiboot
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    //exit chroot
    gummiboot
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    is it something like that? can anyone point me towards a manual
    Last edited by crashandburn4 (2013-03-03 14:58:53)

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