The easiest way to install Windows 7 on your Macbook.



I am going to say this first, I am not the most technically advanced person in the world. Especially when it comes to my Macbook. I have had this laptop for nearly 3 years now and I am just learning most of the shortcuts and how to use it to its fullest. I really wanted to learn more and putting the newest Windows OS on my life line was a huge step. The only reason I really wanted it on the laptop was because I wanted to play PC games and use Office. This was my biggest and scariest experiment to date, installing Windows 7 on it. I did face a couple of potholes on the way, Boot Camp Assistant was not my friend, but that was my own fault, too many files to partition. I had to burn two dvds because the first one did not work. But when it was time for the macbook to preform, I was not let down. This is why I love my 3 year old macbook.
First off, follow the system requirements it gives you, I only have 1 gb of ram and to date that has been plenty. I have an 80 gb hard drive but I also have a 320gb external. As long as you have more than 10 gb of space on your laptop and don’t plan on adding tons more to it, you should be all set. If you cringed at the idea of having less than 3 gb of space left on your laptop, external is the way to go.
That being said, follow my lead. Go to the Windows 7 download site, download your copy and make sure to write your serial down. Then burn the iso to a dvd, its easier with the Mac then a windows machine. After you have that done, I suggest trying out a free trial of VMWare Fusion. It was a toss up between Boot Camp and VMWare, but when Boot Camp Assistant decided that it could not partition my hard drive, VMWare was the way to go. I got the trial of VMWare Fusion and then inserted my Windows 7 cd and about an hour later, I was running Windows and Mac, smooth like butter. I put the image on my laptop hard drive at first but then I moved it over to my external. Once I opened the image on my external, it just asked if I had moved or copied it, select moved and it makes the changes.
It was a pretty interesting experience, but with VMWare Fusion, it is MUCH better than dual boot. You can also use Parallels, which I have used before, but Fusion was much easier to use.
