12-21-2006, 01:32 AM
[quote M A V I C]
There ya go, contradicting yourself again. How does one "run" boot camp without using it?
One downloads it in the Mac environment and then runs it.
One does NOT "reboot and use boot camp" as you said.
Remember--it was YOU who said to "reboot and use boot camp".
Once rebooted, one does not "use boot camp".
You download Boot Camp, run it, and then reboot.
You don't, as you claimed, "reboot and use boot camp".
Once used, Boot Camp can be trashed. It is not used again.
Therefore, to satisfy the original poster's requirements, he uses Boot Camp ONE TIME to prepare his Macintosh for Windows. Then he reboots and USES WINDOWS. He reboots to install Windows, and he reboots to use Windows.
He does not "reboot and use boot camp".
You keep ignoring what you said. Why do you keep ignoring what you said?
I am inferring exactly what you said.
What, then, did you mean by "reboot and use boot camp"?
Did you not mean to do those things in that order? If not, why not? If not, why did you say what you said the way you said it?
Maybe YOU need to come back and explain what YOU meant, because you plainly said something you could not have meant--that is, if you have any idea what you're talking about.
One does not repeatedly use Boot Camp. One uses it once, then throws it away, never to use it again. So why would you imply to someone that he should "reboot and use boot camp"?
Fact: you're a moron. That"s why.
As far as your claim of "One cannot boot Windows directly on an Intel Mac without using boot camp. It's that simple," that's 100% wrong. One absolutely can boot an Intel Mac straight from the XP SP2 install CD and install XP. You don't get the partitioning that Boot Camp provides; so what? So you simply destroy the partitions, make a new one, and go. Voila. XP machine.
And one does not "reboot and use boot camp". It's that simple.
no, not at all. One downloads Boot Camp and runs it one time in the Macintosh environment
There ya go, contradicting yourself again. How does one "run" boot camp without using it?
One downloads it in the Mac environment and then runs it.
One does NOT "reboot and use boot camp" as you said.
Remember--it was YOU who said to "reboot and use boot camp".
Once rebooted, one does not "use boot camp".
And you don't *use* Boot Camp for anything once the Windows side is set up.
And how does one setup boot camp without using it?
There ya go, bootcamp gets used!
You download Boot Camp, run it, and then reboot.
You don't, as you claimed, "reboot and use boot camp".
Once used, Boot Camp can be trashed. It is not used again.
Therefore, to satisfy the original poster's requirements, he uses Boot Camp ONE TIME to prepare his Macintosh for Windows. Then he reboots and USES WINDOWS. He reboots to install Windows, and he reboots to use Windows.
He does not "reboot and use boot camp".
You keep ignoring what you said. Why do you keep ignoring what you said?
BTW, you may be inproperly inferring just because I said "reboot and use boot camp" that I'm saying "reboot and then use the boot camp installer."
One cannot boot Windows directly on an Intel Mac without using boot camp. It's that simple.
I am inferring exactly what you said.
What, then, did you mean by "reboot and use boot camp"?
Did you not mean to do those things in that order? If not, why not? If not, why did you say what you said the way you said it?
Maybe YOU need to come back and explain what YOU meant, because you plainly said something you could not have meant--that is, if you have any idea what you're talking about.
One does not repeatedly use Boot Camp. One uses it once, then throws it away, never to use it again. So why would you imply to someone that he should "reboot and use boot camp"?
Fact: you're a moron. That"s why.
As far as your claim of "One cannot boot Windows directly on an Intel Mac without using boot camp. It's that simple," that's 100% wrong. One absolutely can boot an Intel Mac straight from the XP SP2 install CD and install XP. You don't get the partitioning that Boot Camp provides; so what? So you simply destroy the partitions, make a new one, and go. Voila. XP machine.
And one does not "reboot and use boot camp". It's that simple.