It's starting to really look like I'm not getting any Windows version on this MacBook. This one won't go past the very first "Windows is loading files." setup screen, before even copying any files.
I've now even tried it with an official Windows 7 ISO. Looking at Windows Device Manager, there was an unspecified problem with the display adapter corresponding to the NVidia card.
It succeeded, but the driver wouldn't take for some reason.
I then tried manually installing latest NVidia driver for my GeForce GT 330M card. In macOS, the Boot Camp Assistant app will help you partition your Mac hard drive to accommodate both operating systems, so you can install Windows from an installation disk or an ISO image stored on a USB flash drive. I got much further, because it didn't try to automatically install drivers. In most cases, the installer selects and formats the BOOTCAMP partition automatically. If the installer asks where to install Windows, select the BOOTCAMP partition and click Format. I tried installing the Windows 10 again, this time disabling internet connection during setup. When Boot Camp Assistant finishes, your Mac restarts to the Windows installer. I can still get into the OS X by holding down the Option key at boot, but Windows is no go. After restart, I found that that Windows partition is unbootable.
The installer proceeded to copy all the files, but then, at the end, it complained that it couldn't update the boot configuration. I tried to install Windows 8.1, as suggested. How can I make the Bootcamp Assistant recognize my bootable USB stick? Since this is no longer an option, my only hope is USB. What bugs me is the fact that this very laptop used to run Windows on Bootcamp successfully in the past, but it was installed via Bootcamp Assistant from a DVD. Having thought that the graphics driver is the most probable culprit, I tried disabling the built-in Intel HD graphis card, hoping it would help, but to no avail. There's always a problem with one of the mountmgr.sys or igdkmd64.sys drivers. Going either way results in blue screen and/or endless restart/repair cycle that can't be fixed by anything I tried.
But things get impossibly complicated the moment I update drivers either via Apple's Bootcamp driver package or Windows Update. I followed these instructions and it got me as far as installing and an initial run of Windows OS. Unfortunately, Bootcamp Assistant insists on this boot media and completely ignores the bootable Windows 10 USB that I have plugged in. The laptop has a broken optical drive which doesn't recognize any media. I haven't used a dual-boot Mac in some time as I use VMWare instead.As the title says, I'm looking for a way to install Windows 10 on a mid 2010 MacBook that is currently running OS X Yosemite. If you need Bootcamp drivers, Download and install Windows support software on your Mac - Apple Support. Select the one from which you want to boot, and hit enter. It will also include USB drives, if that is a path you wish to take instead.
It will present a list of system devices that are detected. You get the boot menu by pressing and holding the option key after the boot sound and before the grey screen. You will likely clobber your apple boot record, but you should be able to restore that by using the Recovery Boot Partition and repairing your OS X installation.Īfter you have Ubuntu installed on a partition, try to use the boot menu to select the partition from which you wish to boot. Even while restarting and holding down OPTION the disk selection wouldn’t pop up. If you insist on a native Ubuntu running on bare metal, just use Disk Manager to resize your system partition, add a second partition and install Ubuntu on the second partition. Recently, my MacBook was only booting into my Bootcamp Windows OS. It will support things like KVM Hypervisor in a VM, which VBox will not.
If it does not provide everything you require, you might try a demo of VMWare Fusion for OS X. I would look at VirtualBox as a free solution to run Ubuntu on your Mac. Personally, I would avoid using BootCamp altogether.