Once you click the Start Installation button within Boot Camp Assistant, it is assumed that your Windows install disc is in your optical drive -- either a drive on your system or an external drive. Thereafter your Mac will reboot, and start off the Windows install disc to begin installing Microsoft Windows to your newly created Boot Camp partition.
If all goes fine, then that's great. But if you see an error -- maybe there is an error reading your disc or some communication error. First ascertain that you are indeed stuck and cannot proceed -- then hold the Power button on your Mac to shut down the computer. Thereafter, hold the Option (Alt) key while you restart your computer. Most probably you will see a menu with a single option that lets you boot to your Mac OS -- choose this option and boot into your Mac OS X partition.
Make sure you have an alternative installation disc or another optical drive -- maybe you can attach an external optical drive. Then ascertain that the Windows install disc is now accessible.
You can next start Boot Camp Assistant. The first two screens will be similar to what you see when running Boot Camp Assistant for the time -- but the third screen will differ. Since your Boot Camp partition has already been created, you won't be asked to carve a new partition at this point of time. Rather you will be presented with the two options you can see in Figure 1.
Figure 1: Relaunch Boot Camp Assistant
These options are:
To launch the Windows installation again, please choose the second option and click Continue. This will reboot your computer and start the Windows installation again.
Labels: boot_camp, mac_os_x, windows_7
Once you have launched Boot Camp Assistant and made sure you have the additional software you need (such as Windows drivers for your Mac hardware), you will get to the screen that asks you to partition your Mac hard disk to carve out a Windows partition, as shown in Figure 1 below.
Figure 1: Carve a Windows partition with Boot Camp Assistant
By default, you may be asked to create a partition as small as 20 GB -- that's far too less for any practical use. Use as much space as you can spare -- yet do not get tempted to use the Divide Equally option if you have a very large hard disk. As you can see in Figure 2 below, I decided to carve a 200GB Windows partition. Click the Partition button to proceed.
Figure 2: Carve a Windows partition with Boot Camp Assistant
Boot Camp Assistant will now partition your hard disk, as shown in Figure 3 below.
Figure 3: Partition being created
Once the partitioning is done, note that your Mac OS X desktop will show a new hard disk partition called BOOTCAMP, as shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4: New partition displayed
Boot Camp Assistant will prompt you to insert your Windows installation disc, as shown in Figure 5.
Figure 5: Insert your Windows install disc
Insert your Windows install disc, and click the Start Installation button. In the next post in this series, you will learn what happens next.
Labels: boot_camp, mac_os_x, windows_7
If you have fulfilled all requirements for installing Microsoft Windows 7 on your Mac using Boot Camp, then spare an hour or two and get started:
Labels: boot_camp, mac_os_x, windows_7
If you want to install Microsoft Windows 7 on a Mac running Mac OS X Snow Leopard or Lion, using Boot Camp -- you will need to fulfill the following requirements:
Labels: boot_camp, mac_os_x, windows_7
Boot Camp is a technology built within Intel chip based Macs that allows you to create a separate partition in your Mac OS hard disk that can run Microsoft Windows. This separate partition is created from within the existing Mac OS hard disk without deleting any of your existing Mac data -- it goes without saying that you need plenty of hard disk space to create a Boot Camp partition.
Boot Camp is probably the only technology that lets you run Mac OS X and Microsoft Windows on the same hardware without any virtual machines -- this means no emulation is required and you are running Windows on a normal computer -- the Apple hardware is functioning like just any hardware from HP, Dell, Lenovo, Sony, or Toshiba -- or any other vendor.
Earlier versions of Boot Camp let you run Windows XP and Windows Vista -- but Mac OS X Lion only lets you run Windows 7. After you install Boot Camp, you can hold the Option (Alt) key on your Mac's keyboard to bring up the screen that you see in the Figure below -- here you can choose to boot into either the Mac OS X or Windows 7.
You can also set either Mac OS X or Windows 7 as the default boot -- you will learn about this process in a future blog post. In future blog posts, you will also learn more about what you need to install Windows using Boot Camp, and how you actually complete the process.
Meanwhile, you can learn more about Boot Camp on the Apple site.
Typically all sites that I end up visiting are created by geeks for geeks -- I tried in this post to make things very simple -- simple enough for a 10 year old to understand and yet relevant to you even if you are a geek -- if you want to share some feedback, do get in touch through this feedback form -- have a great day!
Labels: boot_camp, mac_os_x, windows_7
This is a really cool idea -- you can create your own quick picture of Albert Einstein teaching a class and writing something with chalk on a blackboard. You just type in your text, and pronto -- the picture gets created -- and it does look quite authentic -- not authentic enough to stand witness but good enough to bring a few laughs!
To get your own Einstein picture, go to Hetemeel.com -- they have several other image generators including one of George Bush and also Microsoft Clippy!
You can probably use these pictures in your next PowerPoint presentation?
Labels: free, fun, images, pictures
Burning a CD or DVD is very easy on Mac OS X -- first you insert a blank CD or DVD in your Mac. You will see a dialog like the one you see in Figure 1 below.
Figure 1: How do you want to burn your CD or DVD?
Typically, you could choose the Open in Finder action -- unless you want to create a DVD you want to play on your TV, for which you will choose the Open iDVD option. You can also choose the Open iTunes option if you want to create a music CD. If you need to burn an image to a CD or DVD, you can choose the Open Disk Utility option -- we covered this in the earlier Burn Image to CD or DVD with Disk Utility post. You can see all these options in Figure 2, below.
Figure 2: Choose Open Finder to burn a regular data CD or DVD
Tip: Do you want to use a third-party application such as Roxio Toast to burn your disc? If you don't see this application here, choose the Open Other Application option.
If you choose the Open Finder option, you'll see a Finder window with a CD or DVD listed as a folder on the Sidebar, as shown in Figure 3.
Figure 3: Untitled DVD is your new DVD (or CD) -- also note that you can see how much space is available in your DVD or CD
You can also right-click (or Ctrl-click) the CD or DVD listed on the Sidebar, and choose some of the options shown in Figure 4.
Figure 4: Rename your disc, or remove it
The Rename option lets you change the volume name of the disc. The Remove option lets you delete the disc project altogether.
To add files to burn to disc, drag your files to the disc's folder -- you will see how much space is available on your new disc, as shown in Figure 5.
Figure 5: How much free space is available on your disc?
At this point of time, no disc has been burned. Once you are ready to burn your disc, just select the File | Burn (Disc Name) menu option as shown in Figure 6.
Figure 6: Get your disc burning
You will see a message box that lets you choose the burn speed, and if you want to save the disc compilation to a folder (useful if you need to burn multiple copies of the disc), a shown in Figure 7, below
Figure 7: Choose the burn speed
Click the Burn button, and OS X starts burning your disc, as shown in Figure 8.
Figure 8: Your disc is burning
You already learned how you can pause and resume your OS X Lion download from the Mac App Store. But as soon as your download is over, you will see the OS X Lion install screen that you see in Figure 1, below. Resist installing this upgrade for now, and choose the Install Mac OS X Lion | Quit Install Mac OS X Lion menu option for now.

You really don't need a separate CD or DVD burning application on your Mac OS X, especially if you want to do something as simple as burning an image to a CD or DVD. Mac OS X's Disk Utility is all you need:


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