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For Boot Camp Users, New Macs Require Windows 8 Or Newer 209

For anyone using Windows 7 by way of Apple's Boot Camp utility, beware: support for Windows via Boot Camp remains, but for the newest Apple laptops, it's only for Windows 8 for now. From Slashgear: This applies to the 2015 MacBook Air, and the 13-inch model of the 2015 MacBook Pro. Windows 8 will remain compatible, as will the forthcoming Windows 10. The 2013 Mac Pro also dropped Boot Camp support for Windows 7, while 2014 iMacs are still compatible, along with 2014 MacBook Airs and 2014 MacBook Pros. For those who still prefer to run Windows 7 on their Macs, there are other options. This change to Boot Camp will not affect using the Microsoft operating system through virtualization software, such as Parallels and VMware Fusion. Also at PC Mag.
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For Boot Camp Users, New Macs Require Windows 8 Or Newer

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    I've always been curious if there is ever going to be a clean way of running straight windows on a macbook air (ideally Windows 10).

    The air form factor is fantastic and really is actually cost competitive with what others put out when compared to quality (apple does have volume) despite all those who say you can get a macbook air equivalent PC for $300, I've never found one that works right.

    For work reasons though I'm stuck with windows... so I'd love to skip the whole bootcamp thing entirely... but still n

    • by ganjadude ( 952775 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @09:35PM (#49310953) Homepage
      a surface pro is the better solution over the macbook air if one must stick with the microsoft camp IMO. light weight, compatible with everything, and in the same price range as the air. Add in the fact that it can be a tablet or a laptop and i think it wins hands down in a comparo between those 2 devices
      • by ArmoredDragon ( 3450605 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @09:43PM (#49310987)

        In my experience the Surface Pro tablets cost more because the price they list doesn't include the keyboard, which it alone is anywhere from $150 to $200.

        • by Trepidity ( 597 ) <delirium-slashdot@@@hackish...org> on Saturday March 21, 2015 @11:03PM (#49311289)

          The base $799 model also comes with less SSD space and a slower processor. That may or may not matter for you, but is worth looking at. For me 64GB of space (what the entry-level Surface Pro 3 has) is getting to be tight.

          To get a rough spec equivalent to the MacBook Air, which comes with an i5 CPU, 128GB SSD, and a keyboard, you have to spend about $1100 on the Surface Pro 3, which is a bit pricier than the $899 MacBook Air.

          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by Daltorak ( 122403 )

            To get a rough spec equivalent to the MacBook Air, which comes with an i5 CPU, 128GB SSD, and a keyboard, you have to spend about $1100 on the Surface Pro 3, which is a bit pricier than the $899 MacBook Air.

            Sure, the Surface Pro is more expensive than a Macbook Air of similar performance levels, but that's because you're paying for a larger, higher-resolution (2160px wide vs 1440) touchscreen, with a detachable keyboard..... so you don't have to go buy a separate tablet for commuting or kicking around at home or whatever. You may end up saving money overall.

            Microsoft has also said that Surface Pro 3 keyboards are going to be compatible with the upcoming Surface 4, so if you're a chronic upgrader (or your Su

            • I've used the Surface Pro keyboard covers, both cheap and expensive. It's amazing that anyone who's actually used one would tout that piece of crap as a feature. It's horrible!

              And seriously - who wants to lug around a two pound tablet? if you want a Windows laptop, just get one of those Yoga things.

              • Speak for yourself. The type cover is light and does the job perfectly. It's no IBM model M but it's on par and a shitload better than some laptops out there. As for who wants to lug around a two pound tablet? I ask you a different question: Who wants to lug around a 2 pound laptop AND a 1 pound tablet.

                I have a small light tablet and an older laptop. I've used neither and taken neither out of my house since getting a Surface. If you're buying a Surface to replace just the laptop, or just the tablet then you

        • at my bestbuy, in store, you can get a surface pro with a keyboard case for 749. which seems to be within 50 bucks of most macbook airs im finding
        • by slaker ( 53818 )

          MSRP is $130 for a Surface Pro 3 keyboard. They generally sell for under $100, sometimes under $80 if you don't mind one of the less popular colors or getting a refurbished one. I'm not sure where you're getting this $200 figure from, but it's significantly off-base.
          Further, the Surface Pro doesn't have a hard requirement that you use Microsoft's keyboard. You can use any bluetooth or USB input devices you'd like.

        • by Hadlock ( 143607 )

          The new Dell XPS 13 (2015 version) is a pretty solid contender for "best Macbook Air-like device that runs Windows 8". Either that or the new X250 Thinkpad. I own the X230 and will probably pick up the XPS 13 to replace it here soon. It has a keyboard, the base model costs the same as a MBA, and has a 1080p screen. Hard to beat. The high end model has some insane 3200x1800 touchscreen which Win8 actually scales pretty well.

          • I've worked with one of these, and it is very sweet. Honest PC alternative to a Macbook. I'm no fanboi (I use both platforms), but PC laptops have been flimsy plastic throwaway junk for years, whereas apple builds reliable, solid, throw-it-in-the-bag and go with no McAfee crapware to deal with. The Dell comes with a little McAfee crapware to uninstall, but in every other respect it is the first decent PC laptop I've seen in a long while.

            Quality costs. The XPS with 8.1 non-Pro, 8GB RAM, the lower-resolu

          • I'll concur with that, in fact I'll say it's way better than the macbook air. Just the SP3 isn't IMO.

        • If you mean $130 at a time when there's no discounts running (I've regularly seen them $30 off). Then sure.

          Hardly the major calamity considering the device is a fully convertible tablet and the device it is being compared to is not even remotely similar.

      • Only if one is not intent on running Windows ON A MAC. It's to be presumed that you wouldn't run Boot Camp if you just wanted to have a system that runs Windows.

        If you must run Windows on a Mac, is there a problem with running it in Virtualbox instead of Boot Camp?

    • "For work reasons though I'm stuck with windows... so I'd love to skip the whole bootcamp thing entirely... but still need the drivers.."

      The EFI firmware on a Mac can either emulate BIOS (like any standard EFI firmware) or on more recent Macs, do a UEFI boot. That means any OS, including Windows, that can do a BIOS or EFI boot, can run natively on a Mac. I have a friend who runs Linux on his Mac. I also have friends who run Mac Pros running Windows only because at the time Apple was getting special deals on

      • The problem is the drivers.

        They won't be signed for Windows 7 and therefore won't load. Also I believe Apple uses ancient intel EFI not standard UEFI that is on modern boards. However, my information could be very outdated so someone can correct me if I am wrong as this was the case late last decade.

        • The problem is the drivers.

          They won't be signed for Windows 7 and therefore won't load. Also I believe Apple uses ancient intel EFI not standard UEFI that is on modern boards. However, my information could be very outdated so someone can correct me if I am wrong as this was the case late last decade.

          Newer Macs can definitely UEFI boot (older Macs notably can not UEFI boot Windows, although they will present it as an option.) Internally, I don't think it's standard UEFI internally. But it exposes UEFI 2.0 functionality to perform booting. I was trying to look up some more info, as I UEFI boot Windows 8 on my Macbook Pro, but no one seems to really keep track of the exact EFI standard Apple implements, if any. I know my 2009 Macbook Pro cannot EFI boot Windows, but my 2013 Macbook Pro can.

          While it's poss

        • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

          you can't boot it up in the "unsigned drivers are ok" mode then?

          that's one of the things that suck with windows 8/8.1.. going to the place to do that is a fucking chore so installing some cheapo duinos(or hell a makerbot replicator) is a chore.

    • by stooo ( 2202012 )

      >> I've always been curious if there is ever going to be a clean way of running straight windows....

      There's no clean way of running windows anyway :)

    • I've always been curious if there is ever going to be a clean way of running straight windows on a macbook air (ideally Windows 10).

      Eh? "Bootcamp" is straight Windows. It isn't a virtualiser like VMWare or Parallels. Its just a point and drool wizard to set up a 'dual boot' system. If you want to do it manually I'm sure there are instructions out on the Interweb.

      but still need the drivers..

      Last time I looked, Bootcamp Assistant had an option to download the Windows drivers as a disc image.

  • by Craig Cruden ( 3592465 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @09:41PM (#49310971)
    This story will apply to not just Apple laptops, but quite a few new laptops going forward. For hardware (including drivers for all the devices built into the motherboard) it makes economic sense to build and test new drivers that are Windows 7 compatible since there is a large pool of people using Windows 7 on desktops that may buy the hardware as an upgrade. For laptop specific hardware for new laptops there is no upgrade market and all new laptops must be sold with Windows 8.1+. It does not make sense to build and test Windows 7 drivers for these devices since there is no real market to speak of. Be it new Apple laptops or other manufactures laptops, new hardware for laptops just will not have the drivers. Just testing a new driver costs millions of dollars. Apple has dropped Windows 7 support in bootcamp for new hardware. It does not make sense for Apple to invest millions of dollars to write and test drivers for hardware that has no hardware support for Windows 7.
    • It is time to stop selling 7 now. Windows operates on a 10 year lifecycle, split in half. After the first 5 years it goes in to "extended support" meaning patches but no new features. So that's a good time to stop selling it. Also, you don't want to sell a laptop with an OS that will go completely out of support right away and require an upgrade. Again, a reason to stop selling it.

      Hence new systems are going 8 only for support.

      Also, despite the whining, it is a fine OS. It's only real issue is the start scr

      • by swb ( 14022 )

        Also, despite the whining, it is a fine OS. It's only real issue is the start screen is inefficient to us. Not impossible, not insurmountable, just inefficient. You can use a system with it just fine. What's more, it is a real easy problem to fix. Buy Start 8, or get Classic Shell for free and you're done, a classic start menu that works nice.

        When I first saw this topic my gut reaction was "Those bastards!" and then I remembered I've been running Win 8 for the last year on a Surface Pro with Classic Shell w

      • by Khyber ( 864651 )

        Actually, that's not the case.

        See, for my purposes, 7 is still superior to 8. Example - RDP7 connection to a hyper-V server using RemoteFX - 3D applications get DOUBLE the performance versus using RDP8.

        Hoping 10 fixes this, but it doesn't seem likely due to how Microsoft changed how things got handled.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      Just testing a new driver costs millions of dollars.

      No, it doesn't. In any case, Apple doesn't supply most of the drivers for their laptops.

      Developing complex drivers can cost millions, but the testing isn't nearly as costly. Much of it is automated. Do you think that Intel, AMD and Nvidia spend millions of dollars a month just on testing?

      Most of the hardware in a Mac laptop is off-the-shelf stuff, developed by other companies. I haven't checked but I expect it is an Intel chipset. Maybe Apple decided to be dicks and change the hardware IDs, but the driver i

      • Developing complex drivers can cost millions, but the testing isn't nearly as costly. Much of it is automated. Do you think that Intel, AMD and Nvidia spend millions of dollars a month just on testing?

        No, they just release them as betas and wait for the bug reports to roll in. Why pay for testers if so many people will test for you for free?

        I started writing this post going for funny, but this actually sounds pretty insightful.

    • by guruevi ( 827432 )

      Millions of dollars? If your OS had a decent and open ABI, there is no reason the actual interaction of your code with the system could be traversed and tested in a fortnight. I've never seen any company dumping millions of dollars in a single version of a driver, a few thousands at best (and most driver code for laptop hardware looks like it was never even tested).

  • by Joe_Dragon ( 2206452 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @09:44PM (#49310993)

    enterprise use is still 7 and most drivers are 7/8 at least from amd / ati / nvidia / intel.

    So is apple going out of there way to lock out 7 or just is to lazy to add the 7 drivers as well?

    • by Pope Hagbard ( 3897945 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @10:14PM (#49311119) Journal

      When has Apple ever cared sweet fuck-all about enterprise?

      • ha!

        my last gig was at cisco. you would not BELIEVE the amount of silver aluminum laptops that you see walking around the san jose (and world wide) campuses. half, maybe more than half of the employees! and I've heard more and more bay area companies are allowing their employees to select mac or win7 (sadly, linux is still rare for corp world). and some companies are almost entirely mac. a friend of mine was lamenting that all of his group and co-workers use macs and so he was 'forced' to use one as his

        • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

          Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by DogDude ( 805747 )
      C'mon. Since when has Apple supported software that was more than a few years old? They assume that everybody buys new electronics annually.
      • OS X Yosemite still supports my 2008 Mac Pro (with upgraded video cards ATI 5770). There is a cost to trying to support legacy software written 10+ years ago..... The operating system has to jump through hoops and keep old obsolete code for APIs that have long been deprecated - it bloats the operating system, often turns operating system code into spaghetti and limits the operating system moving forward -- it also is ripe as a security threat. Most of the software usually works, there sometimes is one o
      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Really? Then how come Macs have a reputation for holding their value and are generally considered well built?

    • So is apple going out of there way to lock out 7 or just is to lazy to add the 7 drivers as well?

      If those are the only two choices, then it's that they're too lazy. This isn't the first new model to lack Windows 7 support via Boot Camp. It's the third. It's actually kinda strange that this one is getting so much publicity, since they've been slowly dropping it with new hardware releases for over a year now.

    • Regular Joes too!

      Win 7 is now the new XP as much as MS is trying to be asses about this (hence try to activate a Windows 7 machine to purchase a license and are redirected to a win OS designed for tablets) and paying BestBuy to destroy copies of 7 long before EOL to force people to use a tablet 8 version etc.

      MS has a problem. Once they have a good thing they throw it away and start a new and then it takes years to fix. XP worked well. Vista I can see some reasons for a new platform but the new low color ico

  • by roc97007 ( 608802 ) on Saturday March 21, 2015 @10:04PM (#49311085) Journal

    > For anyone using Windows 7 by way of Apple's Boot Camp utility, beware: support for Windows via Boot Camp remains, but for the newest Apple laptops, it's only for Windows 8 for now.

    Those sadistic bastards.

  • Although Bootcamp is an option, and the price is right, I recommend installing Parallels Desktop 10. Choose your Guest OS or (choose multiple versions of Windows, for example) and be done with it. On modern hardware the VM's are fast. Once you boot an OS (which takes about the same time as booting via Bootcamp) you can suspend and resume, which takes about 10 seconds. Dynamically sized virtual drives makes the task of dedicating a Bootcamp partition size seem primitive. I've yet to run an application that i
  • I tried for a day to get Linux installed on my Mac. I thought Boot Camp would be perfect; it repartitioned the drive nicely, but I couldn't get Linux to load. I couldn't delete the Windows partition, couldn't remake it as a Linux partition. Eventually gave up. Is there a way to do this?

    • by phayes ( 202222 )

      then your google foo is sadly lacking

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      I tried for a day to get Linux installed on my Mac. I thought Boot Camp would be perfect; it repartitioned the drive nicely, but I couldn't get Linux to load. I couldn't delete the Windows partition, couldn't remake it as a Linux partition. Eventually gave up. Is there a way to do this?

      It's a lot easier now than it was in the past, but all you need to do avoid legacy boot.

      And that's what happened here - Apple stopped supporting legacy boot.

      Instead, it's UEFI firmware does a UEFI boot, which has been support

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 22, 2015 @12:09AM (#49311489)

    Traditionally, "Bootcamp" has been a conglomeration of two separate things:

    1) A compatibility module residing in the system firmware (an EFI module) that provided the ability to boot legacy MBR-based operating systems
    2) A set of drivers packaged by Apple that was more or less guaranteed to install all required drivers for your system

    The CSM (compatibility module) was recently depreciated and removed from the 2013 Mac Pro, and now several of their laptops as well. That is because Windows 8 (or newer) is capable of booting directly from EFI without the compatibility layer in-between (and therefore an MBR partition).

    As far as I know, Apple isn't really even providing driver packages anymore since these operating systems generally support the Macintosh hardware OOTB. This had happened before as well, certain systems like the MacPro1,1 were capable of running Windows 7 or newer (even though Apple didn't list support for those)- you just had to go out and find the drivers yourself, which was fairly easy since nothing in that machine was really proprietary.

    So really, the story should be that Bootcamp has been removed from these Macintosh systems, because it no longer exists. There's no more CSM for booting legacy operating systems and the drivers mostly work OOTB. The recent versions of Windows are capable of booting directly on the machine WITHOUT "Bootcamp".

    • by phayes ( 202222 )

      Too bad you posted this as an AC. It's both insightful & informative.

    • Unfortunately you need a nasty hack to get 64-bit Windows 7 to boot on a MacPro 1,1 because it's got 32-bit firmware; this is true of several early Intel Macs.

      • by guruevi ( 827432 )

        All you need is to load a 64 bit kernel by using a custom compiled 32 bit EFI that simply passes all 'foreign' calls to the hardware. The hardware is 64-bit.

    • by drcagn ( 715012 )

      You're forgetting something else: Boot Camp Assistant, the application in the Utilities folder on Macs.

      For those who don't know, the Boot Camp Assistant is a Mac OS X application that walks you through starting a Windows installation. It asks you to insert a CD-R or USB drive to copy Windows drivers. It partitions your HD/SSD for you. It asks for you to insert your Windows media, verifies it, sets the system hardware to boot from it, then restarts the hardware.

      Later versions of Boot Camp Assistant automatic

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