Quote:Originally posted by andgarden:Upgrading the drivers on my XP partition, the bootcamp installer on the SL disc also seemed to think that my early '08 MBP was a MB Air. Should I be going about it a different way? I've been trying to run the installer from within Windows through the Snow Leopard disc to update the drivers. There were some issues using the 2.0 bootcamp drivers on my initial install of the Win7 64 RC on my pre-unibody, but with 2.1 no issues. In fact the bootcamp 3.0 trackpad drivers are much improved over 2.1. Originally posted by FoO:I used zero hackery in regards to Win7 and Bootcamp driver installation with 2.1 /and/ 3.0 and it works quite fine for me on a 2.16Ghz pre-unibody MBP and a 5,1 2.66 unibody MBP. sys file) and rename it to something like AppleMNT_keep. At the These files are hidden screen, click on Show the contents of this folder. Double-click on the BOOTCAMP (C drive At the These files are hidden screen, click on Show the contents of this folder. The one that came on my newer system dvd of 10.5.6 (vs 10.5) was version 2.1 and had no issues.Thought I'd share this with you guys: (To disable HFS read support in Windows)Disabling the OS X file system read feature 1. Yeah the original Leopard bootcamp was 2.0. No need to worry about losing access to your windows install. I had to do some hackery for the one included with leopard though.And the SL installer doesn't touch the bootcamp partition unless you specifically erase it. Quote:Originally posted by Derango:Snow Leopard's boot camp installer worked fine out of the box for me on windows 7.
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