Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

erkanasu

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 11, 2006
727
652
I can't get boot camp to work with leopard. I keep getting a disk error when I start the windows partition. **** it.

How can I run my windows xp with parallels without boot camp. Is'nt there a virtual disk option? I am very new to parallels.
 

webgoat

macrumors 6502a
Sep 20, 2007
592
0
Austin, TX
I can't get boot camp to work with leopard. I keep getting a disk error when I start the windows partition. **** it.

How can I run my windows xp with parallels without boot camp. Is'nt there a virtual disk option? I am very new to parallels.

boot camp is in no way necessary for running windows via parallels... open parallels and follow the instructions for installing windows... personally i use and prefer vmware fusion

just out of curiosity can you explain the disc error with boot camp? are you formatting fat32 or ntfs and how large?
 

erkanasu

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 11, 2006
727
652
boot camp is in no way necessary for running windows via parallels... open parallels and follow the instructions for installing windows... personally i use and prefer vmware fusion

just out of curiosity can you explain the disc error with boot camp? are you formatting fat32 or ntfs and how large?

It has happened twice to me. Tried 2 different XP disks (i have a valid serial). I format the drive with boot camp(which automatically makes it FAT32), it installs fine, then after the first reboot in the installation I get a disk error message.

I have to restart the machine and go into OS X via option button.
 

webgoat

macrumors 6502a
Sep 20, 2007
592
0
Austin, TX
Did you try and create a partition larger than 32 GB because a partition larger than 32 GB cannot be formatted as a FAT volume.
 

Hmac

macrumors 68020
May 30, 2007
2,135
4
Midwest USA
It has happened twice to me. Tried 2 different XP disks (i have a valid serial). I format the drive with boot camp(which automatically makes it FAT32), it installs fine, then after the first reboot in the installation I get a disk error message.

I have to restart the machine and go into OS X via option button.

How big is your Windows partition? FAT32 will only address a disk less than 32 gigabytes in size. Also make sure you're using a Windows disk that includes Service Pack 2...you can't add it later.

I installed Windows XP onto a 50 gig partition formatted in NTFS - not a problem. I also installed Windows using Parallels - used only the standard Parallels defaults - I can thus run Windows XP by either starting up the virtual machine from Parallels, or I can boot into Windows. Parallels is nice because I can instantly open up Windows. The problem is that it won't run games and stuff that require Direct X, so I use Boot Camp to boot the machine into Windows so I can play PC only games
 

webgoat

macrumors 6502a
Sep 20, 2007
592
0
Austin, TX
only thing else i can think of recommending is making sure you have all firmware updates on your mac.... and that you have a full-install windows xp pro sp2 disc, although more than likely you have both... what do you intend on using windows for because parallels may or may not be able to do everything you want
 

erkanasu

macrumors 6502a
Original poster
Jan 11, 2006
727
652
i'm mainly using parallels to run some cheepo GRE software to practice taking the Test. I gave up gaming on the macbook a long time ago. heh.

i'll prob also use it to run some biochem software that I use in the lab. Very simple software, i'm sure parallels will suffice
 

jeremy.king

macrumors 603
Jul 23, 2002
5,479
1
Holly Springs, NC
Did you try and create a partition larger than 32 GB because a partition larger than 32 GB cannot be formatted as a FAT volume.

Sorry, this is just not true. The 32GB is an artificial limit MS put in their own Disk Management software. You can in fact create/format a FAT32 partition using other means such as third party softer or Disk Utility in Mac OS X (known MS-DOS format).

FAT32 will only address a disk less than 32 gigabytes in size.

Wrong. FAT32 can address a disk up to approx 2 TB.
 

Eidorian

macrumors Penryn
Mar 23, 2005
29,190
386
Indianapolis
Sorry, this is just not true. The 32GB is an artificial limit MS put in their own Disk Management software. You can in fact create/format a FAT32 partition using other means such as third party softer or Disk Utility in Mac OS X (known MS-DOS format).

Wrong. FAT32 can address a disk up to approx 2 TB.
I remember from somewhere that Microsoft allowed FAT32 for partitions under 32 GB since it was efficient enough but once you went beyond that it was NTFS all the way.

It's an annoying artificial limit when it comes to formatting an external drive in Windows though.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.