status of your hard disk, which will highlight any potential problems. Also in Disk Utility, you can check the S.M.A.R.T. This will highlight any hardware issues that may be contributing to system problems. If you have already set your Mac to restart automatically when an unrecoverable system freeze occurs (in the Energy Saver control panel in System Preferences) it should restart by itself in such circumstances
In these cases there’s very little that you can do once the problem occurs except force a restart (hold down the power key for a few seconds).
I’ll write more about Windows 10 on Mac here on and in Windows 10 Field Guide when I get home from France.Some of the main reasons that Mac’s may freeze or crash are: Macs with dual-graphics cards can only use the dedicated graphics card in Windows. If you have a hybrid “Fusion” drive in your Mac, Windows can only use the slower HDD part.
The wizard-like application will prompt you to divvy up the Mac’s storage between Windows and Mac OS X, and will download Apple’s Boot Camp drivers for Windows, which provide generally lackluster performance and utility but do in fact “work.” (The touchpad driver is notably terrible, and the keyboard is weird. If you’re upgrading, you can just do this in-place from within Windows 10, as you would with any other PC.įrom there it’s just a simple matter of running Boot Camp (which you can find with Spotlight, a sort of Start search-like feature that works really well). (I explained this in Get Windows 10 on ISO.) You will also need a Windows 10 product key, unless you intend to just trial the software for 30 days. IMac (Retina 5k, 27-inch, Late-2014 to Mid-2015)Īnd you will of course need a Windows 10 ISO file in either 32-bit or 64-bit form, which you can obtain from the Windows web site. MacBook with Retina display (12-inch, Early-2015)
MacBook Pro with Retina display (15-inch, Mid-2012 to Mid-2015) MacBook Pro with Retina display (13-inch, Late-2012 to Early-2015)
To install Windows 10 on your Mac with Boot Camp, you need to be running Mac OS X “Yosemite” or newer, and you need the latest Boot Camp version (6), which you can get from the Mac App Store. And with official Windows 10 support, Windows fans shouldn’t have as many hoops to jump through as before, though I never had any issues installing Windows 10 on Boot Camp previously, as the system so closely resembles Windows 8.1. Still, the enduring popularity of dual-booting Windows on Macs says something about the state of that market. As with previous versions of this software, doing so incurs numerous performance and efficiency trade-offs, and in my own testing I’ve found virtualization solutions like Parallels Workstation to work better in some cases. Apple now supports dual-booting newer Macs with Windows 10 using a technology called Boot Camp.