Running Windows on macbook

Yeah but why buy a Mac and it's great os and spoil it by running windows lol

When I ran windows on Mac it was because a program I use at work won't run on a Mac
 
Any other idea?
The reason nobody else has responded is because you still haven't told us what applications you'll need Windows for...that will determine whether a native install or a VM would be the best idea...

All the options available to you have been mentioned, as there are only two: VM or native install. Willing to spend money? Parallels or VMware Fusion (personally prefer the latter, easier to use and is compatible with VMware Workstation on Windows), both work brilliantly and you're more than likely to experience no issues at all. Free? VirtualBox, however it's a tad unreliable. Native, the pros and cons are obvious enough.
 
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Yeah but why buy a Mac and it's great os and spoil it by running windows lol

When I ran windows on Mac it was because a program I use at work won't run on a Mac

The apple fanboi is strong with this one.

I dual boot windows to play games, using the leshcat graphics driver for up to date catalyst rather than what ever old #### graphics driver apple are shovelling. They also only provide a basic, retarded trackpad driver because they couldn't possible expect you to have a decent experience on a non apple product.

Tldr, sell that garbage and get something that isn't cult apple.
 
Hello!

The reason why i am wanting to do this is, that i am doing a degree and i dont want to have to take 2 laptops in! I want to be able to run programs like Packet Trackers and BlueJ and programs like that! I know there are mac version but there not that good.
 
The apple fanboi is strong with this one.
And on the flipside...
Tldr, sell that garbage and get something that isn't cult apple.
:rolleyes:

For reference, there is an alternative driver available, don't remember the name though. They're not great Windows machines IMO, however aside from gaming a virtual machine will offer a great experience (damn sight better than the native experience in any Windows notebook I've ever used, mostly due to the trackpad) and enough performance for the majority of users.

Hello!

The reason why i am wanting to do this is, that i am doing a degree and i dont want to have to take 2 laptops in! I want to be able to run programs like Packet Trackers and BlueJ and programs like that! I know there are mac version but there not that good.
Makes more sense now! If that's the case, then I'd just run a virtual machine rather than dual-boot.

Might also be worth running these applications in a Linux VM, depending on what you're doing. That's certainly going to give you longer battery life than running a Windows VM, but it also may be a preferable platform.
 
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