
- #IPARTITION TRIAL HOW TO#
- #IPARTITION TRIAL MAC OS#
- #IPARTITION TRIAL INSTALL#
- #IPARTITION TRIAL FULL#
One difference I see is that I did not wipe my disk beforehand, but that will hardly make a crucial difference. At some point in the installation process Win tries to reboot and than stalls with "Media failure" or something, no matter whether you press C or Alt or nothing upon reboot. I had no problem with the FAT partition but Win did not want to boot from it.
#IPARTITION TRIAL INSTALL#
I than built a third partition using Leopard Disk Utility, erased and formatted it FAT32 and tried to install windows on it.
#IPARTITION TRIAL MAC OS#
However, Bootcamp stops at the second window saying "The startup disk must be formatted as a single Mac OS Extended (journaled) volume or already partitioned by BootCamp Assistant for installing windows". Than using Bootcamp 2.0 from within Leopard I wanted to split the second partition. That works fine, provided you give the Tiger partition at least 30% free space. I repartitioned my disk (160GB on MBP) to allow Tiger (80GB) and Leopard (77GB) sit side by side, so the former Tiger partition was shrunk using Disk Utility from Leopard Install DVD and Leopard installed on the second partition. Very interesting, but at which point did you create the third partition ? And then it's just the small matter of 86 patches (as of now, 63MB) required to bring XP SP2 up-to-date. This Apple Knowledge Base article, about using only 13-character passkeys across multiple platforms, solved that. I had problems connecting XP to my WEP-128bit network.

Don't go in to the Installer when it appears, instead launch Disk Utility from the menu bar.

#IPARTITION TRIAL HOW TO#
Read on.Īssuming you're all backed up, and ready to wipe your disk, here's how to do this: I just tweaked the original a bit, and included some additional details.
#IPARTITION TRIAL FULL#
Full credit for the workaround goes to AxL over at Apple Discussions. So, Boot Camp Assistant will not allow this. (I don't want a debate on the merits of partitioning it works for me, and the one time I didn't do it, I lost a ton of stuff due to 10.1 weirdness). Basically, I wanted three partitions on my startup drive: System, Users and Windows. I thought I'd share the details of how I successfully managed a "non-standard" installation of Boot Camp in 10.5.
