I had the same problem and was able to install 10 TP x64 by first deleting the Bootcamp partition using the Bootcamp app in Mac OS, and then using the Mac OS Disk Utility to manually resize the mac partition and reformatting a second partition to exFAT (didn't try MS-DOS/FAT32, but should work too as the partition is visible to and reformatted by Windows anyhow). Rebooted holding alt key and choosing Windows clean install from my Wininstall USB stick (which I built with Rufus). Deleting the Bootcamp partition apparently removes the hybrid MBR entry which inhibits Windows 10 TP installation, as it asks for a GPT formatted drive. I use a MacBook Pro Late 2011 with OS X El Capitan (10.11.4). I wanted to install Windows using Boot Camp Assistant. However, I got stuck at Partitioning disk. It seems that it is a very common problem, and there are many threads on the web concerning this. Here is the screenshot I took while stuck: So I had to Force Quit Boot Camp Assistant, and restarted my machine. I checked Disk Utility, it seems that I have not lost the 100GB I reserved for Windows, it is still in the available 133.05GB. Besides, I am not observing any abnormal behaviour of my system so far. Glad to hear that you’re having a good experience with Boot Camp.It’s pretty cool, as I explain here: Running Windows XP on your Mac with Boot Camp. I too noticed the same issue, however, and there’s a bit of a trick to getting it to boot into Mac OS X each time, rather than Windows. Repairing Mac OS X partition. To repair Mac OS X partition please follow these steps: Boot your computer into recovery mode (hold Command+R while it starts) Open Disc Utility. Choose your Mac partition (not the whole hard drive) Press “Repair partition”. Does anyone know what I should do to make sure everything regarding the disk is fine (I don't see Repair in Disk Utility)? The partitioning thing freaks me out. Is there any expert who knows what to do with Boot Camp Assistant if I still want to install Windows? How to install sims 3 mods for mac. You should ask this as a separate question. I will try to answer as a comment. Boot to your recovery partition or use internet recovery. Open Disk Utility, select volume, click on Info button, record BSD device node and close Disk Utility. Make sure you change the to the name of the VM you have created, put it in double-quotes if the name has a space in it. Volunteer Posts: 911 Joined: 3. Code: VBoxManage modifyvm 'Mac OS 10.5.8' --cpuidset 00006fb 0000209 078bfbff I'm not trying to judge, but the ISO you have says 'Mac OS X 10.5.8 for Intel & AMD CPUS.iso'. Mar 2009, 00:29 Location: Between Heaven and Hell Primary OS: Mac OS X other VBox Version: PUEL Guest OSses: Windows Server 2003 SP2, Windows XP SP3, Windows 7. Virtualbox for mac os 10.5.8. Since OS X was never released to run on AMD CPUs am I right in assuming that you downloaded this off a warez site and that it's a hacked pirated version of an OS X install disc? From menu bar open Terminal application, enter diskutil verifyvolume diskx where diskx is the recorded BSD device node. If repair is needed, backup important files. To repair, either: Enter command diskutil repairvolume diskx or the following. Quit Terminal, open Disk Utility, highlight volume and select 'First Aid' button. – May 10 '16 at 19:58 •.
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