Parallels to Bootcamp transition

This has already been asked but I am in a foreign country right now and do not have access to my "disk" software.  So my question with a preliminary status;
1.  I have Parallels installed on my Mac.
2.  I have Mavericks OS
3.  Because of a software that I want to use and it has some issues with Parallels
4.  I want to do the following:
Install Bootcamp from the OS
Be able to move my Parallels Windows 7 to Bootcamp
Be able to move my Office 2010 software as well as other software over so that I can use Bootcamp
Is this possible?
Again I do not have access to my "disks" for another 2 weeks.
I appreciate any help...

No. You must create your Boot Camp partition then install Windows in the partition and then install Office in Windows. If you don't have your Windows or Office disk, go to Microsoft's site and using your keys download Windows and Office.

Similar Messages

  • I have an imac bought late 2013, can i use it as a display for the new mac pro? I also want to use windows 8 on it, would this work with parallels or bootcamp?

    I have an imac bought late 2013, can i use it as a display for the new mac pro? I also want to use windows 8 on it, would this work with parallels or bootcamp?

    Yes, it supports target display mode. Windows can be run with either Parallels or Boot Camp.

  • How to move windows 8.1 from parallels to bootcamp?

    I just bought a Macbook Pro Retina (late 2013) a few days ago, and installed a windows 8.1 into it using parallels. Now I want to bootcamp my mac because I realize bootcamp play games better than parallels. So I want to ask is there a way to move my windows 8 from parallels to bootcamp

    if you need the stuff from the parallels install then use a window backup program and make a backup and store it somewhere external
    install windows in bootcamp and restore the backup you took of the parallels virtual machine

  • Download Speeds slow on Mac, not on PC, Parallels or Bootcamp?

    I recently switch from DSL to Cable because they offered higher speeds. I don't know if this affected DSL before because they only offered up to 2.5Mbps, the cable internet I'm on now is a 7Mbps/1Mbps line.
    For the life of me, I cannot figure what is happening with my configurations. I have 2 PCs at home, a intel imac, and a macbook. When I run speedtests on dslreports or when I download large files from microsoft/apple, I get great speeds on my PCs. Around 880KB/s down. However, when I try to do the exact same thing on OSX, I get speeds around 260KB/s and it seems to be capped there.
    The strange thing is that when I run parallels or boot camp, and try the exact downloads or speedtests I get the correct 7Mbps that I'm supposed to get. Am I doing something wrong with my configurations on OSX? It doesn't make sense that I can download in a window on OSX running paralles and get the fast speeds but thru OSX I cannot?
    Both OS's are running Firefox. I've tried Safari and Camino on OSX and get the same results. I'm guessing its not a hardware problem because winxp on parallels and bootcamp get great speeds. This affects both my iMac and macbook. Any help would be appreciated

    I have a 24megabit ADSL+2 connection and I had the same trouble as you.
    When using Ubuntu or windows xp in parallels I had maximum uploads and downloads. But this was not the case in OSX.
    My ftp uploads in osx were like 45k yet in ubuntu the were 120k to the same server.
    I tried all sorts of methods to fix the problem.
    But it turned out my problem was the router, I had a thompson/alcatel router a recent model.
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  • Vista on Parallels and Bootcamp

    I just bought the lastest Parallels and Windows Vista Ultimate, but before I go and install I heard from my friends that there is a way to set up and partition my hard drive so I can run vista through both Parallels and Bootcamp, with them sharing the same partitioned memory is this true? If so, where can I find the instructions online? Do you get to choose how the ram are distributed when I run the system? If so, what is a good ratio?

    Jackian wrote:
    I just bought the lastest Parallels and Windows Vista Ultimate, but before I go and install I heard from my friends that there is a way to set up and partition my hard drive so I can run vista through both Parallels and Bootcamp, with them sharing the same partitioned memory is this true? If so, where can I find the instructions online? Do you get to choose how the ram are distributed when I run the system? If so, what is a good ratio?
    If you google you will find some information. One problem with Vista, at least during the beta days was that each time you ran it from the other system (BootCamp/Parallels) it asked to be reactivated.
    http://macgroup.infopop.cc/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/686608333/m/2281020332
    If you search this forum you will also find many users who are running Winders under both camps.
    It's apparently quite easy.

  • Parallels and Bootcamp Thread

    Id like to start a thread involving the 2. I am would like to get users of both to state their observations and personal opinions. Please take a few moments to add a comment.
    This is to help me and others when trying to decide which to use. I have no choice, I need XP on here, but I HATE the thought of it being inside my clean, pure Mac! lol
    Lets see if I have it correct:
    Bootcamp:
    -Software to bootup Windows. You cannot simply switch over from OS X.
    -You must partition the drive and install Windows on the partition
    -Allows you to use 100% of the Mac's resources
    -easliy "unpartition" drive if Windows is to be removed in the future
    Parallels:
    -Software allowing one to switch back and forth from OSX and Windows and also allows one to use both at the same time
    -Must still partition the drive, but can specify the amount
    -Apps. running in Windows must share resources with OSX, so this may cause Windows apps to run slower.
    -does not offer an "unpartiton" option. You must wipe the entire drive
    Have I got the basics? I will edit this if not. Thank you!

    I'll post to this because while I support the "search first" concept often the information is scattered in multiple threads interlaced with other comments and it takes a ton of time to decipher it all.
    Also in this case I believe both Parallels and Bootcamp have changed the personal computing world enough that I believe we need to examine them together in detail:
    First off: I purchased a MacBookPro and a MacMini based on Intel BECAUSE of these two technologies.
    My work requires programming in Windows XP under Delphi. Yet I prefer Unix and OS X is Unix with a killer GUI. For many years I wanted a notebook that would give me everything in one nice package. The MBP is that notebook and I can only see them getting better and better. Mine has been the best notebook I've ever owned even with the little things like warped lid etc.
    Parallels simply put is the answer to a dream for me. All I need Windows for is to run my programming environment and test. I need internet/network connectivity. In Parallels I get all that and more.
    I installed BootCamp the day the beta came available and it was great. No doubt a killer way to run Windows. But I lost OS X. IE I couldn't switch. For me this was not much better than having a Windows based laptop. I wanted both.
    I think what Parallels has accomplished is simply amazing and I participate in the Parallels forums. But I see alot of people asking for things that are very difficult. Basically they want Parallels to fully support highspeed 3D graphics and full USB 2.0. Both of these things give Windows alone a headache. To ask that it be done in a virtualization environment seems to be asking the impossible.
    Yet Parallels claims there will be answers to these questions. For now I can tell any of you that are concerned... I have not found ONE SINGLE PROGRAM that does not run in Parallels UNLESS it is doing something hardware specific.
    Add to that the speed which which it runs (almost native!) and you simply can't go wrong.
    Furthermore as people here have stated. Parallels uses a disk file to represent the hard disk. To me this is BETTER than having a partition. One simple reason... You can easily make backups of the ENTIRE hard disk. My Windows XP Parallels file is about 16gb. It takes about 5 minutes but on a regular basis and before EVERY new install of anything in Windows or OS X I copy it to my backup disk. I have about 5 archived versions of this file.
    In the event something goes bad in a Windows install... No problem. Quit the VM, copy the "good" file back in place and you've just gone back in time BETTER than any of the restore point stuff in Win XP ever could be.
    That alone makes Parallels an AMAZING choice for people doing testing and development. You can have a "fresh & clean" environment at anytime by copying over a saved off disk file.
    Bootcamp, since it puts WinXP on a disk partition you are resigned to using some of the disk cloning software to achieve the same thing. Most of those like Norton GoBack and others require reboots to "unlock" the volume for cloning. During this reboot you are hosed and unable to use your machine.
    With Parallels while I'm backing up my VM file I'm in Entourage answering messages or surfing the web in Safari/OmniWeb.
    If I were Apple I would be buying up Parallels as we speak and making sure this technology was tightly integrated into Leopard or whatever is destined next.
    Imagine an OS that could boast: Install ANY OS with in this OS and run it at close to native speed in a window! That is what Parallels gives OS X at the current moment. If Apple bought it, put it in Leopard or whatever and didn't kill it too bad with registrations and limitations it might place a serious crimp in M$ plans for XP in the future. They have NOTHING close to this.
    So that's my sales pitch for Parallels. (Parallels... I'll expect my check in the mail!!) It's not for everyone! If you want to run XP based fast graphics games... You will probably have trouble. If you want to control various strange USB devices requiring drivers. You will probably have trouble. If you want to install and run the mariad variety of XP software and be able to use it while you are still running everything you like and love about OS X then it is the way to go.
    The ONLY caveat... MEMORY! Load your machine up to the max! MacPRO users have a special problem in that they can put more memory in than Parallels supports but those issues are being worked on.
    I'm hoping someday a firmware/ROM fix comes out for the MBP that enables us to put 4gb in these little notebooks. That would rock.
    Mark

  • Using both Parallel and Bootcamp

    Hi,
    I was wondering if it's possible to have both Parallel and Bootcamp.
    For my Macbook Pro Retina, I plan to install Windows 7 using Bootcamp to run Solidworks.
    But I also want to have Parallel to switch back and forth to quickly do different tasks other than CAD.
    Is it possible to have both with one Windows 7 product key?
    If having both is possible, how do I do it and  which one do I install first, Bootcamp or Parallels?
    Thank you in advance

    1. It is possible to use both Parallels and Bootcamp.
    2. It requires reactivating the Windows side with the same product key.
    3. Install Bootcamp first, then Parallels.
    4. Please see http://kb.parallels.com/en/112941 for the necessary steps after Bootcamp is installed.

  • Running Parallels with Bootcamp

    Hey guys. I was really wondering whether i should buy Parallels or just use Bootcamp. I was going to play some games on my new MacBook Air so i just thought of Bootcamp, but somebody told me that you could install Parallels and Bootcamp. I could experience both worlds! Cool!
    Anyways, here are my questions. I hope you can answer them!
    1. If i read correctly, i heard that you can use Parallels based on your bootcamp partition. Am i correct?
    2. Does that mean i only have to install Windows once? And i can only have one part of my hard drive used for Windows, instead of 2 if i use Parallels and Windows separatly?
    3. So basically, whenever i use Parallels based on my bootcamp parition, am i using Windows basically on bootcamp at the same time? (please tell me if you want to understand what i'm saying, i might not be clear here)
    4. So when i use Parallels do i have all the stuff that i will have on my Bootcamp parition? Like all my files and games and whatnot?
    Thanks!

    1. yes
    2. yes
    3. yes
    4. yes
    Read the instructions for doing this on the Parallels or Fusion site. Both explain how to do this.

  • Can I install Windows 7 and Windows 8 to my MBA using Parallels and Bootcamp?

    I have a Macbook Air (latest model, 11", i7, 256gb, 8gb ram, Mavericks).
    I need to have access to Windows 7 and 8 and have been toying with the idea of getting a cheap laptop but the problem is most new machines are Windows 8 and they won't allow you to dual-boot with Windows 7 (you need W7 as your main OS and then install W8 later).
    I'm also keen on not spending a shedload extra and carrying another device, so I was thinking if this was possible:
    Buy Parallels Desktop 9 - then either using bootcamp or not, Install both Windows 7 and Windows 8.
    I'm not fussed about running everything at the same time, happy to shut one VM down if it helps performance.
    I have read that multiple OSs such as vista and XP worked once upon a time, but I get the feeling the screw is being tightened with all these cross OS installs and didn't want to drop a couple of hundred quid only to find out I'm trying something that isn't possible.
    thanks for your advice.

    I can't help you with Parallels, but I've been using VMware Fusion for quite a while and you can run Windows 95 through Windows 8.1 without difficulty, so Windows 7 and 8 on the same Mac is easy to do. I think your biggest difficulty will be the small size of your SSD. But with virtualization, you can put the virtual machines on an external SSD connected via USB 3.0 and run them quite well.

  • Parallels unmounted BOOTCAMP partition, I cant remount, cant use BC or Para

    This is a crosspost from the parallels support forums. Nobody has responded there and I have tried a few more things and all have failed, desperation is rising.
    I hope someone here has some kind of idea what might be going on because I have some very valuable data on my boot camp partition and I did not expect a trial of Parallels to destroy it...
    I tried installing the Parallels trial version of Desktop 6. For some reason it would not ID my boot camp partition and said that I had to mount it using the disk utility. I thought this was strange but didn't think much more of it. I continued to use my computer for other purposes for about an hour and decided I wanted to head back to my BOOTCAMP side, so I restarted into Windows and recieved "Disk read error, press ctrl +alt +del" from the DOS prompt. Restarted a few times and continued to get the same error.
    I returned to OSX and discovered that my BOOTCAMP partition no longer appears on my desktop, or as an option for Startup Disk. If I start Disk Utility, I see my OSX partition, and then I see my BOOTCAMP partition, but now it is unmounted (greyed out) and reads "disk0s3". Attempts to mount it have been unsuccessful. If I try the same from the terminal I receive "Volume on disk0s3 failed to mount".
    I attempted to use Parallels to read the drive to at least recover my important documents but when I pointed it to the (what used to be) boot camp partition, the virtual machine reported "no OS installed on this drive".
    In some research in the issue, I read something about MacFUSE or NTFS-3G locking down the mount abilities of the drive. Someone is having a similar issue as me here, for example. Finder does see a folder with one file called "ntfs-3g" in /opt/local/var/ in a FUSE folder, but other than that I see no indication of ntfs-3g being installed. Not only that but I attempted both uninstalling and installing MacFUSE from System Preferences. In both cases I could still not mount the drive or boot to my boot camp partition.
    Please help! I'm really at my wit's end here and I am horrified at the thought of losing all of my data.
    No idea if this helps but here is diskutil info on the partition
    Some further research indicates there may be an issue with MBR? This is getting far out of the realm of my expertise so I would have no idea where to start investigating.
    Device Identifier: disk0s3
    Device Node: /dev/disk0s3
    Part Of Whole: disk0
    Device / Media Name: BOOTCAMP
    Volume Name:
    Escaped with Unicode:
    Mounted: No
    File System: MS-DOS
    Type: msdos
    Name: MS-DOS (FAT)
    Partition Type: Microsoft Basic Data
    Bootable: Is bootable
    Media Type: Generic
    Protocol: SATA
    SMART Status: Verified
    Total Size: 125.3 GB (125294346240 Bytes) (exactly 244715520 512-Byte-Blocks)
    Volume Free Space: 0 B (0 Bytes) (exactly 0 512-Byte-Blocks)
    Read-Only Media: No
    Read-Only Volume: Not applicable (not mounted)
    Ejectable: No
    Whole: No
    Internal: Yes
    More information, from rEFIt:
    * Report for internal hard disk *
    Current GPT partition table:
    # Start LBA End LBA Type
    1 40 409639 EFI System (FAT)
    2 409640 243417127 Mac OS X HFS+
    3 243681280 488396799 Basic Data
    Current MBR partition table:
    # A Start LBA End LBA Type
    1 1 409639 ee EFI Protective
    2 409640 243417127 af Mac OS X HFS+
    3 * 243681280 488396799 07 NTFS/HPFS
    MBR contents:
    Boot Code: Unknown, but bootable
    Partition at LBA 40:
    Boot Code: None (Non-system disk message)
    File System: FAT32
    Listed in GPT as partition 1, type EFI System (FAT)
    Partition at LBA 409640:
    Boot Code: None
    File System: HFS Extended (HFS+)
    Listed in GPT as partition 2, type Mac OS X HFS+
    Listed in MBR as partition 2, type af Mac OS X HFS+
    Partition at LBA 243681280:
    Boot Code: Windows BOOTMGR (Vista)
    File System: NTFS
    Listed in GPT as partition 3, type Basic Data
    Listed in MBR as partition 3, type 07 NTFS/HPFS, active
    I have also tried booting from ubuntu live CD (which did not work and resulted in a very scary loud sysbeeping and flashing of the front LED). Then I tried booting from win7 CD. That may still be a viable option but I need to find a USB keyboard because the stock mackbook pro keyboard seems to not send input when i am prompted for "press any key to boot from CD/DVD".
    I also tried uninstalling parallels and installing VMWare Fusion. Fusion also does not detect the BOOTCAMP partition. It doesn't see it at all. Assuming this is because it is still unmounted.
    I do not care if I lose my install, I will probably want to do clean installs of both leopard and win7 after this is all over. But I really do need to recover my data. If anyone knows of a utility that can browse unmounted NTFS volumes locally from OSX, I will buy you a thousand peachy penguins.
    Message was edited by: emtheory

    Still no definitive solution but a few updates.
    I was able to boot off the win7 DVD. Apparently I was not slamming the keys fast enough the first few times. I selected the option to repair an installation of windows, but it couldn't identify any NTFS partitions. At that point I decided any hope of booting from this partition was lost, and I may as well just focus on data recovery. I found a tool called FileSalvage which sweeps partitions, mounted or unmounted, and looks for the signature of known file types. It can then restore those files. I believe I should be able to restore most of the files I need with this type of tool, but unfortunately it costs $80. I am still looking for any similar DIY or freeware solutions.

  • Not Again! Window Ultimate Parallels and Bootcamp

    I have read hundreds of threads and I don’t want this to be another but I have question that were not specifically answered on not answered at all. I am a life long Windows user and finally made the jump a few months ago. I am a photographer and I have many thousands of dollars in (Windows) software. I considered repurchasing some of them, just keeping an old PC, buying new MAC license for the software that offered it but I have decided to run a dual OS MAC.
    Specs:
    Model Name: MacBook Pro
    Model Identifier: MacBookPro5,5
    Processor Name: Intel Core 2 Duo
    Processor Speed: 2.26 GHz
    Number Of Processors: 1
    Total Number Of Cores: 2
    L2 Cache: 3 MB
    Memory: 2 GB
    Bus Speed: 1.07 GHz
    Boot ROM Version: MBP55.00AC.B03
    SMC Version (system): 1.47f2
    System Version: Mac OS X 10.6.1 (10B504)
    The big question, Bootcamp or Parallels?
    I will use Windows (Vista Ultimate 32bit) for Adobe Master Collection (mainly PS, DW and Flash). I have a few other pieces like Light Room, Aperture and one or two PC only apps. My main uses are minor/moderate .jpg photo retouches/edits in Photoshop and maintain my websites with Dreamweaver.
    Questions:
    1. With my needs, does it sound like BC or Parallels might be a good fit? (File sharing in mind)
    2. What will I see when I fire up the MAC? Will Windows and MAC OS boot at the same time? Is there a choice of what to boot?
    3. File Sharing; Can I take an image that I have brought in via iPhoto, edit it in Photoshop and send it back to the iPhoto library?
    4. I understand that PS and DW are CPU hogs and not really memory. Is this true and should I take my 2gb of memory up to 4gb?
    5..I have seen several comments about a Bootcamp portioned drive being better but no one has explained what that is. Can some one elaborate what that is and is that something done via the Parallels app and if not what is the difference between the Bootcamp partition and what Parallels does?
    6.I will keep my online activities on the MAC side except for my ftp transfers for my sites. With this limitation and limited exposure do you think I need to install a virus protection on the windows side? Does loading Windows increase my exposure to viruses?
    7.With Parallels, Can I shut down the Windows portion and have it apply all the resources back to the MAC os?
    8.I have purchased but not opened Parallels 4.0. I see that 5.0 is out at the same price. Should I go with the new or stick with 4.0 which has been out for a while?
    9.For those that say no to Parallels, should I just work with Bootcamp and a jump drive to move files back and forth?
    10.Finally, with the specs below, how much space should I partition to carry the load?
    *Specs for Parallel:*
    Memory Requirements 1 GB of RAM (2 GB recommended to run Windows Vista). Support for any memory configuration (up to 16 GB), without modifying your host system.
    Disk Space
    Software Installation — 450 MB of available hard drive space for Parallels Desktop 5 for Mac installation (plus space to allocate to your virtual machine).
    *Windows Ultimate Specs:* Not sure exactly how much space it eats up.
    Min Processor Type: Intel x86 - 1 GHz
    Min RAM Size: 1 GB
    Min Hard Drive Space: 40 GB
    *Adobe Master Collection Specs:*
    2GB of RAM (more RAM recommended when running multiple components)
    24.3GB of available hard-disk space for installation; additional free space required during installation (cannot install on flash-based storage devices)

    Questions:
    1. Boot Camp. Graphic/processor intensive apps should generally not be run in a virtual environment
    2. It will startup in whatever OS you have chosen the computer to boot from
    3. Yes
    4. Yes..upgrade to 4GB
    5. Running Windows through Boot Camp is no different than running it on any other PC...that's why it's better.
    6. Of course. Windows is Windows no matter how or what it's installed on. It's still vulnerable to the same viruses.
    7. Yes
    8. See if you're entitled to free upgrade to Parallels 5
    9. That's your call. Nobody can make that decision for you.
    10. Depends on how big the hard drive is.

  • Question about Parallels using Bootcamp partition

    I was about to install XP on bootcamp but i would mainly be using parallels to run XP from the bootcamp partition. What i was wondering is that if i was to make any changes to xp like install a software and create a new folder through parallels, would it reflect on the actual bootcamp partition when i load into the actual XP partition using bootcamp? Basically, do the changes made to windows using parallels carry over to the bootcamp partition given you are using the bootcamp partition on parallels?
    Thanks

    Thanks a lot. While i am at it, if i use the bootcamp partition with Parallels, i cannot suspend the VM right?
    Parallels will behave the same, whether it has its own copy of Windows, or is using that on the Boot Camp partition.
    The only difference is backup. If you use Parallels with Windows in a disk image file (Preferably a sparse bundle), Windows can be backed up with Time Machine. If Windows is on its own partition, Time Machine can't handle it.

  • Windows 7 OEM parallels and Bootcamp, installation sequence?

    So ive got a 2013 macbook air and planning on using the OEM licence to firstly create a bootcamp partition, and the having parallels run off the bootcamp partition. Now I understand I might have to go through the whole phone activation the second time. My question is ...what sequence should I use to activate.Should I activate parallels first after the installation of parallel tools or can I just activate bootcamp first????

    Karim.Foad wrote:
    Ok wow that's cleared a lot up ....I've been researching this for the last few days , and getting mixed views with some saying windows will count the virtual machine as a separate computer and they have all sorts if activation problems .But for the second activation , in parallels , the long digit phone activation should be sufficient ?? Because I really don't look forward to explaining everything to a Microsoft Representative
    Over the phon haha!
    This is why I originally suggested that you read the activation directions on the Parallels and Fusion sites. They address the issue of Windows thinking that the VM installation is a second installation of Windows when in fact it is not. This is because you are not installing Windows in Parallels you are only pointing to your single Bootcamp installation of Windows. This is an issue that has been addressed by the VM manufacturers.

  • Parallels vs Bootcamp

    Does anyone have any unbiased opinions on Bootcamp versus Parallels for my iMac. I have 4GB of RAM  and the dual Intel 3.06GHz processor. My concern with parallels is the resource that it requires when it is suspended. I understand that the memory for the Parallels application is locked and you can't access that memory when Parallels is suspended. I mainly use Windows for one or two applications that are not well developed for a Mac.
    Thanks!

    I actually bought a 3TB internal drive from OWC and had the Apple Specialty shop install the drive and was very happy with them. It was this particular shop that told me that no one supplies the 4GB memory to add to the 2GB to give a total of 6.
    It's too bad I didn't know about OWC supplying memory before I brought my Mac in for service because the 2008 models are complex to work on, according to OWC. I understand Apple made it easier with the later models but then they introduced the hard drive sensors.
    I wlll message OWC and ask about them about the RAM upgrade. Thanks!

  • Parallels replacing Bootcamp. What to do with the partition?

    I am getting rid of my Bootcamp partition to be replaced by Parallels. How might I do this? I hope I don't need to reinstall Snow Leopard etc. Is there a simple solution to just have no partition on the machine?
    Thanks,
    Tyler

    Three ways to do it and they are all covered in Parallels documentation - none of them involve reinstalling Mac OS.
    1. Delete BC using BC Assistant but this means reinstalling Windows when you set up Parallels which you probably don't want to do.
    2. Set up Parallels using existing BC partition as a data disk. I did not try this as there are some Parallels features which cannot be used. Also it seemed to me that it was expensive in terms of HD space.
    3. Set up Parallels using the option to convert the BC partition to a Parallels one. Once you are sure it is working you can delete the BC partition which recovers a large amount of HD as Parallels has a very small footprint. The problem with this option is that Parallels first makes a copy of your BC partition before starting the setup process and you may not have enough disk space - if you do, it does free up a lot of space.
    Hope this helps.

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