F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Bootcamp, good or bad?

Bootcamp, good or bad?

Bootcamp, good or bad?

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kohiplays
Member
155
03-21-2023, 12:11 PM
#1
Consider your needs: bootcamp gives you a Mac experience on a PC, while a VM lets you run Windows separately. Running Windows directly on a PC offers full control but requires more setup and resources. The main difference is how you use the system—either integrated or isolated.
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kohiplays
03-21-2023, 12:11 PM #1

Consider your needs: bootcamp gives you a Mac experience on a PC, while a VM lets you run Windows separately. Running Windows directly on a PC offers full control but requires more setup and resources. The main difference is how you use the system—either integrated or isolated.

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Will_Nei
Member
142
03-27-2023, 10:14 AM
#2
For top performance with a bit of visuals, Bootcamp is the best choice. For lighter tasks, Parallels or Fusion work well. On the latest MacBook Pros, the touchbar doesn’t function in Windows at all.
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Will_Nei
03-27-2023, 10:14 AM #2

For top performance with a bit of visuals, Bootcamp is the best choice. For lighter tasks, Parallels or Fusion work well. On the latest MacBook Pros, the touchbar doesn’t function in Windows at all.

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Shardgale
Senior Member
547
03-27-2023, 12:41 PM
#3
Running Windows inside a virtual machine has limitations, so consider bootcamp as an alternative.
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Shardgale
03-27-2023, 12:41 PM #3

Running Windows inside a virtual machine has limitations, so consider bootcamp as an alternative.

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yoman225
Member
71
03-27-2023, 02:38 PM
#4
Performance is good. The touch bar isn't working. TouchBar functions well in Bootcamp; the usual setup includes brightness, volume, media controls (plus possibly others), and function keys. You can't change the layout settings.
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yoman225
03-27-2023, 02:38 PM #4

Performance is good. The touch bar isn't working. TouchBar functions well in Bootcamp; the usual setup includes brightness, volume, media controls (plus possibly others), and function keys. You can't change the layout settings.

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Fennster4
Junior Member
38
03-27-2023, 08:11 PM
#5
Confirming the situation: the TB models were released, but the system didn’t function properly for a long time. I haven’t used one that’s been repaired recently.
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Fennster4
03-27-2023, 08:11 PM #5

Confirming the situation: the TB models were released, but the system didn’t function properly for a long time. I haven’t used one that’s been repaired recently.

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BomrBoy93
Junior Member
12
03-29-2023, 08:04 PM
#6
I should have been clearer about what I need. I plan to use Office, Inkscape (which isn’t working well on macOS and doesn’t run smoothly in Wine), a couple of 2D games, and Cisco Packet Tracer. My old MacBook Pro is also mentioned—someone said Bootcamp uses the AMD GPU instead of Intel. I have two main concerns: first, the machine could overheat and the GPU might fail, and second, I need good battery life in Windows, so I wouldn’t want to bootcamp at all.
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BomrBoy93
03-29-2023, 08:04 PM #6

I should have been clearer about what I need. I plan to use Office, Inkscape (which isn’t working well on macOS and doesn’t run smoothly in Wine), a couple of 2D games, and Cisco Packet Tracer. My old MacBook Pro is also mentioned—someone said Bootcamp uses the AMD GPU instead of Intel. I have two main concerns: first, the machine could overheat and the GPU might fail, and second, I need good battery life in Windows, so I wouldn’t want to bootcamp at all.

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AGamersHero
Member
65
03-29-2023, 09:21 PM
#7
Office for Mac functions adequately on my system. In 2016 it’s still that way, though launching can be slow. For your software, however, I don’t think Bootcamp is necessary. Parallels or Fusion would suffice. The GPU issue seems unavoidable. I’d seek ways to completely turn it off, honestly (especially for a 2011 model).
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AGamersHero
03-29-2023, 09:21 PM #7

Office for Mac functions adequately on my system. In 2016 it’s still that way, though launching can be slow. For your software, however, I don’t think Bootcamp is necessary. Parallels or Fusion would suffice. The GPU issue seems unavoidable. I’d seek ways to completely turn it off, honestly (especially for a 2011 model).

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MrCupquake
Member
229
04-11-2023, 12:20 AM
#8
Sure, you can set up an Office suite on Windows by using a compatible version or a virtual machine. Make sure to check compatibility and install the right drivers.
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MrCupquake
04-11-2023, 12:20 AM #8

Sure, you can set up an Office suite on Windows by using a compatible version or a virtual machine. Make sure to check compatibility and install the right drivers.

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DrPingouin
Member
214
04-11-2023, 02:03 AM
#9
Are you sure? I've dealt with 100+ page projects in university using mostly Windows, with only a few Mac users nearby. Everyone used 2013 or 2016, and everything functioned well across both platforms. It's a bit complex, but achievable.
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DrPingouin
04-11-2023, 02:03 AM #9

Are you sure? I've dealt with 100+ page projects in university using mostly Windows, with only a few Mac users nearby. Everyone used 2013 or 2016, and everything functioned well across both platforms. It's a bit complex, but achievable.

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xCrusherYT
Member
187
04-14-2023, 01:22 PM
#10
I need to handle tasks such as printing to a network printer, but I used another method before. Now my Mac isn’t turning off and the screen brightness stays at its highest level.
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xCrusherYT
04-14-2023, 01:22 PM #10

I need to handle tasks such as printing to a network printer, but I used another method before. Now my Mac isn’t turning off and the screen brightness stays at its highest level.

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