


This screen provides an overview of Boot Camp. After you launch it, the first screen you see is labeled Introduction. Step 3: Launch Boot Camp Assistantīoot Camp Assistant is bundled with the Mac OS and can be found in the Utilities folder within the Applications folder at the root level of your hard drive (/Applications/Utilities). Time Machine, which is bundled with OS X.

If you don’t currently have another backup strategy in place, take a look at Should something go wrong, you don’t risk losing any of your data. Step 2: Back up your dataīecause Boot Camp creates a partition-and could possibly move some of your data in the process-it’s a good idea to have a complete backup of your startup drive. You must also have a Windows installer disc or disc image as well as the serial number to go with it. To install the 64-bit version of Windows 7 you need at least 20GB of free storage on that startup drive. If you wish to run the 32-bit version of Windows 7 you’ll need at least 16GB of free storage space. The processor entry should include the word “Intel” and the OS version should be 10.7 or higher. If you’re unsure which kind of processor your Mac has and the operating system it’s running, choose About This Mac from the Apple menu. Under Lion, Boot Camp supports Windows 7 only. If you have a Mac with a PowerPC processor, you’re out of luck.
