Reinstallling Windows 7 oem on bootcamp

Hi i have recently gotten windows7 with boot camp on my Imac but found that my partition for Windows was to small, i wish to enlarge it but i am afraid i cant reinstall windows 7 becuase i have a OEM version. Is it possible for me to install windows 7 again or am i going to need to buy a new product key?

Windows 7 can  make disk image - OS and all your data track by track - of existing to external disk (StartMenu> Maintenance> BackupAndRestore> Create a System Image) - which could be restored to larger OSX BootCamped space.
You would want to first create a Windows 7 32/64 repair CD: (StartMenu> Maintenance> Create a System Repair Disk).
After OSX BootCamp space expand, boot (with Option key,) with external disk mounted, selecting Repair CD to boot from and then selecting Restore Image backup in Repair menus, (I am not sure if it will auto format  enlarged BootCamp space to NTFS or ask you to tell it to do so).
The restore and original backup will take about 1 hour, less time than a Windows install with all its and BootCamp updates.

Similar Messages

  • Can i use Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64-bit - OEM for bootcamp?

    Someone suggested to use
    Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64-bit - OEM for bootcamp.
    Can i use Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64-bit - OEM to use in bootcamp to install windows 7 on my mac book pro 13 inch?
    thank you.
    PS: i bought my macbook pro 3 weeks ago.
    Also, is there any other windows 7 installation CD that is cheaper?
    thank you.

    Yes.
    OEM just means that the Windows OS is dedicated to that computer only. If you sell, replace or throw away the computer you use it on, the Windows CD/DVD goes along with it. (According to the Licensing dialog)
    Just do a Yahoo/Google search for prices is the only way to find it cheaper. Or keep an eye on your favorite web store for sales.
    If you are in college and have an .edu e-mail account thru the college then Microsoft has it for about $30 US. And other deals also.

  • When installing Windows 7 using Bootcamp, expanding windows files gets stuck at 65%?

    I was installing Windows 7 Home Premium 64 bit on my Macboom Pro Retina with Bootcamp, and when it reached the "expanding windows files" stage, it got stuck at 0%. I waited a few minutes, and the percentage began to increase until it got to 65%, at which it stopped again. I left it for a while, but after coming back nearly an hour later, it was still stuck at 65%, so I canceled the installation by clicking the close button of the installation window. It froze after that. I could move my cursor, but I couldn't click anything. I got impatient and held down the power button to shut it down manually. When I restarted the Mac, it played the normal startup sound then went to a black screen with a blinking dash symbol in the upper left corner. It's now stuck on this screen. I'm scared I might have really screwed up my computer. What do I do?

    Edit: Fixed it by just holding down the option key when it restarted. Don't know why I didn't think of that before. I also removed the partial Windows download and the whole Windows disc partition using Bootcamp.
    I think the reason why it didn't work is because I used an OEM version of Windows 7, which is to say I bought the licence key off of some website for $35 and they emailed me with the key and an .iso of Windows 7. I read somewhere that using OEMs with Bootcamp is not recommended. But that leads me to another problem - I really do want Windows on my Mac since I have some programs that would only run on Windows and I bought PhotoShop Elements 12 for the Windows platform and to switch platforms I would need to upgrade to 13, which costs almost as much as buying the original. And I don't want to go buy a proper Windows installation disc, that would mean wasting the $35 I already spent.
    So is there any way I can actually install Windows safely with my OEM version of it?

  • Cannot install Windows 7 with bootcamp

    Ok, I am getting really frustrated at this point with bootcamp. I have previously installed win7 on this same computer I'm working with, I reformatted the drive and uninstalled windows with bootcamp, the reason I did this was because I needed more space on my windows drive. I have followed all of bootcamp's directions and I keep getting stuck on the same spot. After creating a win7 install usb stick (with the same oem copy of win7 I used last time), downloading the drivers, and getting thru the partioning steps, the computer reboots into windows install. I see "disk 0 partition 4: bootcamp" after clicking format (to get it to be formatted to ntfs) I click next, then I keep getting the following error. "Setup was unable to create a new system partition or locate an existing system partition. See the Setup log files for more information."
    I have tried installing with bootcamp a few different times, even with a different copy of windows 7 and keep getting stuck here. I have installed it just fine before, I dont know why this is happening now. I am on a 15" 2012 rMBP 500gb model

    Hi All-
    I know this post is dated slightly but I wanted to chime in with some Bootcamp help on the newer vintage MBP laptops. 
    Just to throw it out there - nearly every Mac I purchase gets hardware hacked the minute it comes out of the box.  RAM/SSD upgrades are usually the first on the agenda.  The SSD/drive upgrades can tend to muck-up the process of using Apple's standard BootCamp tools for loading Windows.
    Here is a very simple way to accomplish the same things that BootCamp does only the right way so Windows will be happy alongside OS X.
    1. Download your Windows ISO (stop making DVDs!) and make a USB bootable stick.  You can do this in a number of ways - on the OS X side use Disk Utility, on the Windows side use the Microsoft Store USB download/create tool.  Just make sure you have a -known- good working USB bootable Windows 7 install media (or Windows 8)
    2. Once you've done this you will want to get the WindowsSupport folder for your model of Mac, so launch BootCamp, un-check the top and bottom options so that only the Download Support Files option is selected, indicate that you would like to copy to an external drive.  Tell it to place the folder either on your Desktop or in your Library somewhere.  Let it do its thing and then copy those files onto your newly created USB Windows 7/8 install media.  Now you have the Windows installation media as well as the Apple BootCamp drivers for Windows all on one single USB.
    3. Partitioning - instead of using the flawed BootCamp software to do this, we'll use Disk Utility in OS X.  Launch Disk Utility and highlight your primary hard drive.  Click the 'Partition' button at the top.  Now click the '+' button to add a partition, name it WINDOWS or something so you can identify it easily later.  Use the slider to create the size of partition you would like for Windows - this will auto-resize your OS X partition.  On the right-hand side of the Disk Utility window use the drop-down to change partition type from Mac OS X Journaled to MS-FAT.  Once you have done all of that use the Apply button to let it do its thing and re-size/create partitions.  This takes about 3 minutes tops.
    4. Install Windows!  - Be sure your Windows 7/8 USB bootable install media is inserted in a USB slot on the system.  Once you have completed the re-partitioning action, simply shut down your machine, and restart it holding the Option (Alt) button.  The alt button will cause the system to eventually show you a choice of bootable disks.  The USB disk will be easily identified because it will have an orange colored icon with the USB symbol on it.  Click this to boot from the USB Windows 7/8 install media.
    5. Windows Installer - the Windows installer will launch after a period of time, use the 'Next' button and accept the license terms and you will be brought to a window to select the destination for the Windows install.  You should automatically see the WINDOWS (or whatever you named it) partition that was created during step 3.  Highlight this partition and the 'next' button should un-grey and become available, if it does, click it and the Windows installation will proceed.  If the 'next' button does not un-grey you will want to highlight the partition and select 'Format', once that completes it will un-grey the 'next' button and the install will proceed.
    6. Once the installation is done it will need to reboot a few times (normal Windows install procedure at this point).  You will need to hold down the 'alt' key during each reboot and now select the 'WINDOWS' hard disk partition (not the USB one) from the boot menu to continue going through the motions of Windows installation.
    7. BootCamp Driver Install - once you have finished all of the reboots and motions of Windows installation you will want to boot into Windows, and once at the desktop make sure your USB install media that was used previously is inserted into the system.  Go to My Computer, find the USB drive, open it, and navigate to the WindowsSupport folder that was saved during step 2.  There will be an application called Setup , double-click this and choose 'Allow' during any security warnings.  Click 'next' once the installer loads and it will automatically install every Mac device driver needed on the Windows side.
    7 steps and approximately 45-minutes later you should be sitting with a fresh installation of Windows on a bootcamped partition. 
    Hope this helps somebody out - it took me quite some time and research to figure out the "cleanest" method for bypassing the flakey BootCamp application for installing Windows.   

  • Installing Windows 7 with Bootcamp question

    Hey guys, I recently switched over from a PC to a Mac this year and wanted to install Windows 7 with Bootcamp so I could do some gaming every once and a while. I've read that I can't use the restore discs that I got with my ASUS to install Vista, so that's out of the question. I also have a Windows 7 upgrade disc that I used a while back to install Windows 7 on the ASUS. Will that upgrade disc work if the ASUS is restored? If not, will an OEM copy of Windows 7 be all I need? A retail copy of Windows 7 Home Edition is kind of steep to only be used part of the time.
    Thanks in advance!

    Well, "WHICH" Mac do you have?
    Go to the Apple menu (upper left corner)/About This Mac/More Info and at the top (under Hardware content) it should say "Model name" and "Identifier". Then put it in your profile so you don't have to keep remembering to do it.:)
    You might call/e-mail ASUS and ask if it can be used on another computer. Don't tell them it will be used on a Mac. Just tell them your thinking on building one from scratch.
    If you have a "desktop" ASUS then you MIGHT be able to just switch over the HD after Upgrading it to 7, but I believe the ASUS, Dell, etc, setups are "matched" to the COMPUTER so it might not work. A retail full version of Window 7 will work. You might also try Microsoft and tell them the same thing, might be able to get another "Upgrade"?
    I'm in the same boat, just play a few games on XP but want to get Windows 7, you have to spend $100 dollars more for "Pro" to get the "Windows XP Mode"! E-Bay does have it quite a bit cheaper then Microsoft sells it for.

  • Windows OEM on Macbook

    I have read a few reviews by people that say you cant run Windows OEM on a Macbook. I was wondering if this is true. I am looking to add Winxp to it instead of Vista. I need it to run Microsoft Money as I am comfortable with it and dont feel like waisting money on Quicken for Mac if I might not like it. I know I like MS Money so that seems the logical choice.

    Hi,
    If you have an Intel Core 2 Duo macbook, then yes you can. I am running Windows Vista currently and everything is flawless. You can also install Windows XP since the bootcamp 2.0 drivers works both for Vista and XP.
    For those who said that they were not able to run Windows, maybe their macbooks were the Intel Core Duo's, not the Intel Core 2 Duo's.
    To see if you have the Intel Core 2 Duo macbook, you just have to
    1) Click on the Apple Logo on the upper left hand corner
    2) Click on About this Mac
    3) Click on More Info
    4) Click on Hardware
    5) Under Processor Name, it should say Intel Core 2 Duo
    If it doesn't say that, then you cannot run Windows.
    Maybe this is easier, if you bought your macbook after May 15, 2007 then you have a Intel Core 2 Duo Macbook.
    Hope this helps

  • How to install windows 8 using bootcamp with no optical drive

    Hi,
    I have a mac book pro 17" late 2011 with Mountain Lion installed.
    I have previously installed a windows 7 using bootcamp without an optical drive by creating an install disk as part of boot camp option.
    I still don't have an optical drive.
    The other day I removed my Windows 7 since I want to try Windows 8 but when I try using boot camp to install windows 8 it is asking for an optical drive and the option to create an install disk is not available anymore.
    Any idea on this issue?
    Thanks much

    Windows 8: enable Hyper-V, it really helps.
    http://www.gizmodo.com.au/2012/03/windows-8-on-a-macbook-air-beautiful-and-kinda -broken/
    http://www.windows-now.com/blogs/robert/hyper-v-3-0-confirmed-for-windows-8-clie nt.aspx
    http://www.windows8update.com/2011/12/06/enabling-hyper-v-in-windows-8/ 
    http://huguesval.com/blog/2012/02/installing-windows-7-on-a-mac-without-superdri ve-with-virtualbox/
    Disable Windows 8’s Adaptive Brightness to Fix Dark Screen Problems
    http://www.howtogeek.com/107173/disable-windows-8s-adaptive-brightness-to-fix-da rk-screen-problems/
    It should be straight forward and no different, except you are burning an ISO and that always needs to be done at slowest burn speed for any version of Windows.Otherwise it won't work (even if it manages to install it will fail on restart or some other point).
    Windows 8 Release Preview
    http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/apps/default
    https://blogs.msdn.com/b/b8/?Redirected=true

  • Using Parallels with Windows 7 on Bootcamp caused startup logo to disappear

    Please let me know whether this is just neurotic or what! Windows 7 RC on Bootcamp partition worked great until I installed a trial copy of Parallels 5.0. Even with Parallels, things seemed fine, but I did not like some behaviors of the program when run under Parallels. Using Parallels, I was leery about the issue that when I clicked on the icon of the E-drive (the Macintosh hard drive), I kept getting the message that it needed to be formatted. Certainly I was able to access the files of the MacIntosh through shared folders, and by dragging files from desktop to desktop, but I saw very little advantage of for running Parallels for what I do with the Windows programs, and I did not want to mess up the Macintosh hard drive by an accidental reformat while using Windows. Also I like the fact that if I start Windows from the Bootcamp partition rather than access it via Parallels, Windows is physically well isolated from MacOSX, I do not really have a chance to delete or mess up the Mac hard drive, and at the same time one can access the Mac OSX disk for files that might be needed by dragging these into the Windows partition. Parallels just seemed unneeded.
    Now that I have uninstalled Parallels from the Mac partition and have uninstalled the Parallels programs and tools on the Windows partition, I still have a strange phenomenon that first showed itself when I had first installed the Parallels 5.0 program. Specifically, since the very day that Parallels first was installed and the bootcamp partition was used as the hard drive for Windows run under Parallels, and now even after uninstalling Parallels, the behavior of the Windows flag logo and startup graphics have been changed. A progress bar that previously did not exist before I used Parallels appears on startup, and the moving colored pieces of the Windows flag logo that are supposed to come together as Windows 7 is booted now do not appear during startup.
    To my best knowledge, besides uninstalling Parallels programs, I have also removed manually all parts of Parallels that I can find from Windows, and I even excised hidden files and folders of Parallels found on the C drive. I also sought out PRL files from the Windows partition. I uninstalled and physically removed a program called Stardust (?)... Starcolor (?) or something like that, which was installed at the time Parallels was installed. Folders for this had icons of Macintosh programs. Additionally tried to remove all Parallels, PRL, and Stardust items also from the registry, but there are stubborn ones that are in the "pnp Lockdown files", and some others there that also fail to remove elsewhere. The Lockdown files that do not remove are Parallels files involved in booting, and the others are for a PRL 4600 monitor (???). I was able to remove PRL files in the "Driver Store" folder by changing permissions, and then these were able to be removed. I see no settings anywhere for startup logos in msconfig or when I search through programs in the control panel or in the Windows system folder. I have emptied temporary folders, Prefetch, and have used Windows Live Safety Center to remove stray registry files and to fix issues.
    Attempts to go back to an old restore point do not work and do not get me back to the Windows 7 installation that i used to have. I reinstalled drivers for Bootcamp from the Snow Leopard disk, and finally I tried to repair the installation (by starting up windows using function keys) with at the same time the Windows 7 RC installation disk available for access of files. The option for repair when started up this way is for repair of a non-starting installation. When this is selected, it seems there is nothing found that needs to be repaired. Thus the startup for Windows still has the same behavior. Maybe I do not know how to repair an installation of Windows, and maybe nothing really needs to be changed back to the former condition. Am I just bothering with something that is just fine but which never will be identical to what it was before Parallels?
    The bottom line is that even though things seem to operate fine otherwise, I feel Parallels has somehow adulterated the Windows installation, which I would rather just run as Windows without artifacts from a prior installation that influence it.
    Thank you for guiding through whatever I need or need not do with these issues.

    Please let me know whether this is just neurotic or what! Windows 7 RC on Bootcamp partition worked great until I installed a trial copy of Parallels 5.0. Even with Parallels, things seemed fine, but I did not like some behaviors of the program when run under Parallels. Using Parallels, I was leery about the issue that when I clicked on the icon of the E-drive (the Macintosh hard drive), I kept getting the message that it needed to be formatted. Certainly I was able to access the files of the MacIntosh through shared folders, and by dragging files from desktop to desktop, but I saw very little advantage of for running Parallels for what I do with the Windows programs, and I did not want to mess up the Macintosh hard drive by an accidental reformat while using Windows. Also I like the fact that if I start Windows from the Bootcamp partition rather than access it via Parallels, Windows is physically well isolated from MacOSX, I do not really have a chance to delete or mess up the Mac hard drive, and at the same time one can access the Mac OSX disk for files that might be needed by dragging these into the Windows partition. Parallels just seemed unneeded.
    Now that I have uninstalled Parallels from the Mac partition and have uninstalled the Parallels programs and tools on the Windows partition, I still have a strange phenomenon that first showed itself when I had first installed the Parallels 5.0 program. Specifically, since the very day that Parallels first was installed and the bootcamp partition was used as the hard drive for Windows run under Parallels, and now even after uninstalling Parallels, the behavior of the Windows flag logo and startup graphics have been changed. A progress bar that previously did not exist before I used Parallels appears on startup, and the moving colored pieces of the Windows flag logo that are supposed to come together as Windows 7 is booted now do not appear during startup.
    To my best knowledge, besides uninstalling Parallels programs, I have also removed manually all parts of Parallels that I can find from Windows, and I even excised hidden files and folders of Parallels found on the C drive. I also sought out PRL files from the Windows partition. I uninstalled and physically removed a program called Stardust (?)... Starcolor (?) or something like that, which was installed at the time Parallels was installed. Folders for this had icons of Macintosh programs. Additionally tried to remove all Parallels, PRL, and Stardust items also from the registry, but there are stubborn ones that are in the "pnp Lockdown files", and some others there that also fail to remove elsewhere. The Lockdown files that do not remove are Parallels files involved in booting, and the others are for a PRL 4600 monitor (???). I was able to remove PRL files in the "Driver Store" folder by changing permissions, and then these were able to be removed. I see no settings anywhere for startup logos in msconfig or when I search through programs in the control panel or in the Windows system folder. I have emptied temporary folders, Prefetch, and have used Windows Live Safety Center to remove stray registry files and to fix issues.
    Attempts to go back to an old restore point do not work and do not get me back to the Windows 7 installation that i used to have. I reinstalled drivers for Bootcamp from the Snow Leopard disk, and finally I tried to repair the installation (by starting up windows using function keys) with at the same time the Windows 7 RC installation disk available for access of files. The option for repair when started up this way is for repair of a non-starting installation. When this is selected, it seems there is nothing found that needs to be repaired. Thus the startup for Windows still has the same behavior. Maybe I do not know how to repair an installation of Windows, and maybe nothing really needs to be changed back to the former condition. Am I just bothering with something that is just fine but which never will be identical to what it was before Parallels?
    The bottom line is that even though things seem to operate fine otherwise, I feel Parallels has somehow adulterated the Windows installation, which I would rather just run as Windows without artifacts from a prior installation that influence it.
    Thank you for guiding through whatever I need or need not do with these issues.

  • Trying to install Windows 7 with Bootcamp on my Macbook with a faulty CD drive

    I am trying to install Windows 7 with Bootcamp on my Macbook A1278 (OS 10.6.8) with a faulty CD drive (CDs and DVDs get stuck in it and I had to get it removed in an Apple store, so I don't want to use it anymore). I have got a licence for the product but I am only in possession of the ISO, is there any way to install it using a USB stick?
    I don't have many options while launching Bootcamp, only
    "Download the Windows support software for this Mac" but when I try I get a message explaining me that the download could not continue as the software is not available,
    or
    "I have the Mac OS X installation disc [...]" but obviously I can't use my CD drive so this is not an option. I tried it anyway and I created a Windows partition but when asked to "start the Windows installer", I can only continue by insering a CD.
    I tried to use a USB stick and added the ISO on it but nothing has changed.
    How can I install my copy on Windows?...

    BobTheFisherman > Hem, yeah, that is stating the problem and not working toward resolving it.
    Turbostar > I checked the link and it seems to be relating to the first video I have seen on the subject. I tried to install Tuxera then to work with rEFIt, but I did not get any result yet (I don't know if I am doing something wrong during the USB writing process as many different ways are explained on different websites).
    So far my last try was to launch Windows 7 USB DVD Download Tool on VMware Fusion but it the only disk shown is A:\ Removable disk (not the name of my USB) and it is stated that the disk is being used by another program, even though it's not open on the Mac side.
    Some websites are advising to write the copy of windows on a USB via a PC and then launch it on the Macbook, so I might try that in the next few days. I will keep you updated.
    If anyone has another option I might not have think about, or an advice on how to efficiently create a bootable Windows setup USB with my Mac, please let me know!

  • Installed WIndows 7 & correct bootcamp drivers, windows will not activate "hot fix" or "Support drivers"

    Hello, i hope someone can help,
    i have repeated this whole process 3 times already, it has taken 8 strait hours of my time and i still have had no success.
    QUICK SUMMERY
    To put it simply, After windows is up and running on my mac, the wireless network wont work, so i cannot download the hot fix, and the support driver files from bootcamp will not open because it says they are not "32 Valid" ?. But im using a 64bit disk.
    The wireless network adaptor automatically doesn't work on windows right after installation,
    so i had to load the Hot Fix onto an SD card along with the bootcamp drivers, then open the hotfix file in windows.
    The first time i was able to install the fix, windows restarted and installed the update, logged back on... and nothing changed.
    At that point i attempted to open the "Setup"  file in the bootcamp support folder, and an error message came up saying it wasn't valid.
    LONGER EXPLANATION OF MY COMPLETE PROCESS: (to cancel out any questions)
    i was able to find my support driver from here:
    http://swscan.apple.com/content/catalogs/others/index-leopard-snowleopard.merged -1.sucatalog
    its some old fashion coded page that has a bunch of apple drivers you can download by pasting one of the codes in your browser,
    i searched for bootcamp support drivers, and found the code for my exact model (Mac Pro 8,2)
    i was able to manually downloaded the drivers instead of  using bootcamp assistant.
    As a side note,
    i was able to download the bootcamp drivers via boot camp assistant after the 5th try,
    so now i have both files that i know are supposed to work 100%. they are loaded and unzipped on an SD card like they are supposed to be for when i open windows.
    I have a Genuine Windows 7 Home Premium x64 bit CD from the inlaws so i used that CD after i partitioned my drive in bootcamp.
    Bootcamp run like it was supposed to, and i followed step by step instructions in this video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uVfRQ0YIDUI&feature=related
    once windows was finished installing,
    it automatically would not detect a network card, so i couldn't connect to the internet and download the apples bug fix. (The Hot fix)
    instead i downloaded the hot fix on a separate SD card, turned windows back on and loaded the hot fix from the SD card.
    Windows installed the hot fix update, restarted, but nothing changed.
    Ive even tried skipping right to uploading the drivers, and windows wont activate the support because it says its not "32 Valid"
    I completely removed windows 7 vis bootcamp to rinse and repeat hoping i made a simple mistake, but no same thing happened.
    Conclusion
    -im Wondering if i should "Istall important Windows Updates" during the begining of windows preperation...
    maybe that will fix the issues of it not reconizing wierless network, and not being able to upen up the bootcamp file?
    (it says you are not supposed to install any windows updates untill the HOT FIX and BOOTCAMP SUPPORT is activated on windows)

    Keith Doherty3 wrote:
    You have been too cleaver for a Boot Camp install.
    The partition system does NOT like anything other than a standard arrangement which creates 4 partitions.
    EFI -200mb
    OSx - Extended Journaled
    Buffer-200mb
    Windows -NTFS
    Return to OSx -Open Boot Camp tool from the utilities folder reset to a single partition.
    Start again and when you get to Windows - Let all the drivers load on the CREATED partition. Use the External for storage !
    Just for your information, as it doesn't seem you have ever used BC.
    When starting the boot camp assistant the first thing it want to do is download the Windows Support drivers and asks you to save them to a DVD, it will also allow you to save them to your OS X hard drive or to any drive connected to the system. Once those drivers are downloaded it then starts the Win install. What you must do is copy those support drives to a media that Windows can See and Read from. Like a DVD or a thumb drive formatted FAT32
    No where in the OPs post does he say anything about fooling with any partitions on his internal drive other then creating the BC partition.
    His problem is he saved those support files to a Mac OS X formatted external drive. Windows can not read Mac Extended (Journaled) formatted drives. So he can't load the drivers for Windows until he copies those support files ove to something that Windows can read.

  • Many Questions on Windows 8 and Bootcamp

    Hi. I have a couple questions question on windows 8 and bootcamp. I know this is probably on the internet somewhere, but i can't find it anywhere if it is. So please don't strike me down for repeat questions.
    My first question is wether or not widows 8 will run on the current version of bootcamp. I know that it is not fully compatible but can it be installed with few issues since the underlying code for windows 7 and 8 should be relatively similair. I have read a posting on line that says this is possible but i wanted a second opinion. I have a 64 bit version system builder edition shipping to me right now, is this ok.
    My second question is when (if ever) the patches come out for winodws 8 to run perfectly on bootcamp, will I just be able to download them, Install the patches and everything will be just fine. Would/ could it be done with out having to reinstall the operating system. This is important because a system builder lisence can only be installed once and then i have to buy another copy of windows 8 for $100.
    Any and all input would be great. Thanks!

    in terms of updates to win8 then as far as windows8 goes it's running on a normal "pc" not on a mac it's not virtualization here so everything works as normal
    I bought an imac 2011 version 22" 4GB ....
    I installed windows7 ultimate 64bit on it
    since I bought the digital update to windows 8 pro
    updated over the internet (you download an exe and take it from there)
    it updated fine it use the windows7 drivers so everything in terms of mac stuff works as before
    I let it update the amd video card driver and got a lot of crashes at bootup
    rolled back to the bootcamp win7 drivers and it's a lot better
    sure every now and then startup result in a crash but a reboot always get me into win8
    play games and program in win8 never had a cash when I get in and because it's native games run great
    likely when the official apple win8 support comes along I will stop getting the odd crash at boot into win8

  • My MacBook Pro 13" (2012) is running Windows 7 on Bootcamp and there is an issue with the headset I'm using.

    My MacBook Pro 13" (2012) is running Windows 7 on Bootcamp and there is an issue with the headset I'm using. I use a cheap Logitech Stereo Headset H130, but since there is only on audio plugin on the computer, I purchased a 3.5 mm 4-pin smartphone audio adapter thingy. That allowed me to put both my the sound coming to my headset & the microphone on my headset onto one wire. Everything worked wonderfully when running the Mac OS since they probably have support for that kind of stuff. The problem is though that once I try to use the same method in Windows 7, the OS doesn't recognize my headset microphone at all, but, instead when recording my voice decides to use the built-in mac microphone. Using this adapter still allows me to hear from my headset, but not use the microphone and that becomes a problem. It might be so that Windows 7 doesn't have support\drivers for that... How should I continue from here on out? Any advice?

    From what I have read from others on here you may be out of luck. You would need the appropriate Windows drivers for the Cirrus chip in the Mac and no one has been able to successfully locate them. Apple wouldn't support this since Windows is an optional install.
    Sorry to bring the bad news.

  • How to reinstall windows 8 on bootcamp

    how to reinstall windows 8 on bootcamp macbook pro, without losing anything on OS (Apple) side

    Start Bootcamp Assistant then select the option to remove Windows and return your drive to a single partition. Once Windows is removed start Bootcamp Assistant again and select the option to install Windows. Follow the Bootcamp instructions for installing Windows.
    This process will not cause lose of OSx data or applications if done correctly. But as allways, create a good backup of your data because things sometimes go wrong or instructions are not followed causing data lose.

  • Windows 8.1, BootCamp does not find the ISO image.

    When I try to install Windows 8.1, BootCamp does not find the ISO image.
    I purchased Windows 8.1 Pro, I downloaded the .exe requested file from a Windows computer, performed the steps recommended by Microsoft in order to create the ISO file saving it on a flash drive as well and, as a precaution, on a DVD too.
    I performed the "Download the latest Windows Support Software from Apple" step directly into another flash drive and having it completed BootCamp displays the following message:
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    So happens that I have tried this using the DVD, pendrive and also copying the ISO file to the desktop and to the "Documents" folder as recommended in certain websites, but none of this has made the process go ahead. What can I do?
    My equipment is a mid 2011 iMac running Mac OSX 10.10.1.

    Dear Loner T,
    thanks to my coworker, the solution was unpacking from that ISO file which I had recorded (according to the steps indicated by Microsoft), but now using Nero software (Windows) and then recording by the most common way in a new DVD. See the screen of the first DVD before unpacking:
    This true saga only demonstrated that the generated ISO file as an option at the time of the Windows installation, is not for direct installation through BootCamp, and as a I could check, even for direct installation on a Windows PC. See the last DVD burned using Nero and  again recorded:
    The execution of BootCamp, was perfect
    Thank you for attention to my problem!

  • Windows 8.1 (Bootcamp) goes into Auto Recovery after Yosemite Upgrade

    I upgraded to Yosemite and now my Windows 8.1 bootcamp won't boot up.  I still have the Windows bootcamp option when I hold "Option" on boot, but when I select Windows it goes directly into "Automatic Recovery".
    For the bootcamp partition all the options to do anything are greyed out and the size is much less than before (it was ~200GB before, now it's ~70GB).
    It looks like the missing disk space for bootcamp is now unallocated?
    Thanks in advance for your help!

    Sure can....  I'm not sure if I have a Fusion Drive.  How can I tell?
    por-kellyj-m:~ kellyj$ diskutil list
    /dev/disk0
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:      GUID_partition_scheme                        *500.3 GB   disk0
       1:                        EFI EFI                     209.7 MB   disk0s1
       2:          Apple_CoreStorage                         289.4 GB   disk0s2
       3:                 Apple_Boot Recovery HD             650.0 MB   disk0s3
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    /dev/disk1
       #:                       TYPE NAME                    SIZE       IDENTIFIER
       0:                  Apple_HFS Macintosh HD           *289.1 GB   disk1
                                     Logical Volume on disk0s2
                                     BBEBC6A7-04B5-471E-9CAA-721F1DADE53B
                                     Unlocked Encrypted
    por-kellyj-m:~ kellyj$ diskutil cs list
    CoreStorage logical volume groups (1 found)
    |
    +-- Logical Volume Group FFD4BCA8-5B77-4FFB-BEC4-169633FA62B4
        =========================================================
        Name:         Macintosh HD
        Status:       Online
        Size:         289418031104 B (289.4 GB)
        Free Space:   4096 B (4.1 KB)
        |
        +-< Physical Volume 00C7FC65-505F-493E-8659-06D99AFCC10C
        |   ----------------------------------------------------
        |   Index:    0
        |   Disk:     disk0s2
        |   Status:   Online
        |   Size:     289418031104 B (289.4 GB)
        |
        +-> Logical Volume Family 1E104CBD-82E8-4C14-BDD6-CDC7CD204155
            Encryption Status:       Unlocked
            Encryption Type:         AES-XTS
            Conversion Status:       Complete
            Conversion Direction:    -none-
            Has Encrypted Extents:   Yes
            Fully Secure:            Yes
            Passphrase Required:     Yes
            |
            +-> Logical Volume BBEBC6A7-04B5-471E-9CAA-721F1DADE53B
                Disk:                  disk1
                Status:                Online
                Size (Total):          289082482688 B (289.1 GB)
                Conversion Progress:   -none-
                Revertible:            Yes (unlock and decryption required)
                LV Name:               Macintosh HD
                Volume Name:           Macintosh HD
                Content Hint:          Apple_HFS
    por-kellyj-m:~ kellyj$ sudo gpt -vv -r show /dev/disk0
    Password:
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: mediasize=500277790720; sectorsize=512; blocks=977105060
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Suspicious MBR at sector 0
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Pri GPT at sector 1
    gpt show: /dev/disk0: Sec GPT at sector 977105059
          start       size  index  contents
              0          1         MBR
              1          1         Pri GPT header
              2         32         Pri GPT table
             34          6
             40     409600      1  GPT part - C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
         409640  565269592      2  GPT part - 53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      565679232    1269536      3  GPT part - 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC
      566948768       1120
      566949888  136716288      4  GPT part - EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7
      703666176  273438851
      977105027         32         Sec GPT table
      977105059          1         Sec GPT header
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    Disk: /dev/disk0 geometry: 60821/255/63 [977105060 sectors]
    Signature: 0xAA55
             Starting       Ending
    #: id  cyl  hd sec -  cyl  hd sec [     start -       size]
    1: EE 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [         1 -     409639] <Unknown ID>
    2: AC 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [    409640 -  565269592] <Unknown ID>
    3: AB 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 565679232 -    1269536] Darwin Boot
    *4: 07 1023 254  63 - 1023 254  63 [ 566949888 -  136716288] HPFS/QNX/AUX
    Thanks.

  • How can I install Mac Mini drivers for Windows 7 32-bit if I didn't install Windows 7 using bootcamp?

    Hello. I have a mac-mini (mid 2010) and with bootcamp, was successfully running XP.
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    I finally was able to install Windows 7, by just booting off the CD and letting it install that way.
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    I had a partition so thought Bootcamp wasn't required for my needs.
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    I exported my settings to a text file on a USB Stick, then on Windows was able to successfully install AirPort Utility and import the settings.
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    So I need to know the following:
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    2) How I can install my mac-mini drivers on Windows 7 so I can use my existing wireless network, now that I've gone through the installation without using Bootcamp?
    3) Do I need to set up network adapters and all that stuff in Windows 7 first? If so, how and what drivers do I need?
    One other thing I tried was downloading Bootccamp 4.x and installing that on Windows 7 to see if it gives me the drivers that were supposed to be written to my USB stick if I had installed Windows 7 using Bootcamp in the first place... However I think the message it said was that it couldn't install as it was the wrong version. So I'm still stuck without drivers and therefore no internet.
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    Other Info:
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    Hope you can help.
    Thanks.

    I tried something that worked for me...
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    So that got me thinging - my XP version was 32-bit, and so is my Windows 7 installation. So I tried installing the bootcamp that came with my Mac OS X installation CD. This is bootcamp version 3.1.
    Not only did it install, but it practically took care of everything driver-wise for me. I was then able to see my wireless network, enter my password and I was connected. The only thing else I had to do to get on the Internet was bring IE8 online (guess it ships offline by default). Firewall and Antivirus are now installed, just a few more things to go.
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    I didn't need the AirPoirt Utility at all (at least, I never went into it).
    Thanks VikingOSX for your post. I will not need to follow the steps you provided, but they may help someone else as all of these bootcamp issues I've been reading seem to be very unique per installation.
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