The annoyance is that I can not update the graphics driver to the latest version. That is the issue I am trying to fix. I am not sure what a BC6 driver is, I have only what was automatically installed using Bootcamp when I installed Windows on the partition of my Mac.
The most unusual restriction that Apple didn’t reveal beforehand is how macOS 10.14 won’t play well with Boot Camp, the utility it provides to allow Macs to dual boot Windows. If you have a late 2012 27-inch Mac in particular, you won’t be able to update to Mojave. Your only way forward would be to, which means loosing Windows. And after you’ve upgraded, you can no longer use Boot Camp either. Your only recourse?
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Buying a virtualization product like Parallels. Even if you pass that requirement, you’re not out of the woods yet. Mojave requires Apple’s proprietary Metal graphics API and, therefore, your graphics card has to support it. Apple’s support page the following cards on the mid-2010 and mid-2012 Mac Pros as guaranteed to work:. MSI Gaming Radeon RX 560 128-bit 4GB GDRR5. SAPPHIRE Radeon PULSE RX 580 8GB GDDR5. SAPPHIRE Radeon HD 7950 Mac Edition.
NVIDIA Quadro K5000 for Mac. NVIDIA GeForce GTX 680 Mac Edition There are also a few third-party graphics card that might work. When in doubt, Apple recommends checking with manufacturers first before getting your hopes up.
How many of you actually activate your windows in bootcamp? I installed bootcamp and windows is finally bothering me to get a product key for my windows 10.Im thinking of buying a windows 10 for my bootcamp, but im worried that if i ever feel like deleting my drive, i will have wasted my product key.
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Main questionsquestions: In my experience, windows slows down after a while so ideally, i would like to reformat my windows periodically. How would this reformat process go on bootcamp? Do i just reset my mac booted in windows like a regular pc?
Or do i have to go through the bootcamp process again and arrange my drives? Also does anyone have any experience with windows 10 education?
Im tempted to it since my school offers it, seeing how microsoft advertises how its like a pro version of windows, im worried it is going to use up my mbp's storage. I've only got 128gb so I don't want to waste it with junk i don't use in windows 10 pro.
Lastly, how do windows keys work? If i activate my windows key once, is it locked forever for that installation of windows? If i were to delete my windows drive, would i have to get a new key for windows? I can only answer a few of your questions, as I only recently rejoined the Mac world from the dark PC realm, but I'll try!
I got a perfectly legal Win10 key from play-asia.com for a shade over $20. Going legal is quite worth it, frankly. As far as working on different machines, it depends on what kind you get. If you get a key like the one play asia sells, it can only be used on that hardware since its intended for system builders/OEMs and tied to that hardware essentially forever. If you buy a retail copy of Windows 10 for the regular price, you can switch it between machines as long as only one of them is active at once. Either way, you'll be able to wipe and restore Windows 10 to it pretty much anytime as it authorizes based on information gleaned from your motherboard, if you don't feel like keeping it on there constantly.
You can always nuke the partition and redo it later if you like, and as long as you're on the same MacBook, you'll be fine. If you ever have to swap it out for warranty purposes and you got an OEM/System builder key, you'd likely have to contact MS and explain the situation so they can free it up for your new hardware, but they're pretty flexible with that. FYI, you can always just install the smallest possible Bootcamp partition on your Mac (not sure what that is) and then install PC applications on an external drive. As long as you don't mind doing this, it'll keep all of your PC applications from eating up precious macOS space.:). I would definitely hold onto the key.
I have my Win 10 key stored in a couple of places, just in case I need it. In theory you shouldn't need it again, as it should auto-register if you wipe and then reinstall the OS once it checks online for authorization, but you never know. And yeah, that should be how it works. Most applications give you the option to choose where it is installed, and an external drive works just as well. It might require some system related stuff to be installed on the startup drive, and there could be some exceptions to this rule, but usually that's how it goes!