Lee Lup Yuen

Mister Tech

By Lee Lup Yuen

Tips, tricks for the enterprise user


Windows 7 works great on the MacBook Pro

Posted in Mister Tech by Lee Lup Yuen on Tuesday, September 01 2009 01:04 AM

As a registered Microsoft developer, I had early access to the final release version of Windows 7, which I installed on my 17-inch MacBook Pro. I chose the 64-bit version of Windows 7 Ultimate. I'm happy to report that it installed smoothly and worked great for the past three weeks.

Here are some tips and observations:


  • Installing 64-bit Windows 7 on the MacBook Pro was easy, just use the Boot Camp Assistant that's bundled with Mac OS X.

  • After installing Windows 7, install the Boot Camp drivers from the Mac OS X installation disc. The drivers are needed for operating the special function keys, like for controlling screen brightness and keyboard backlighting.

  • The Mac OS X Snow Leopard installation disc (just released last week) comes with updated Boot Camp drivers. You should install these drivers so that you can access your Mac OS files from Windows. Also when I upgraded my Mac OS X to Snow Leopard, I was able to access my Windows files from Mac OS X. Very useful when you need to work with both Windows and Mac OS X.

  • The MacBook Pro was able to run Windows 7 on battery power for roughly 3.5 hours, while running Microsoft Outlook and a HSPA Mobile Broadband Modem. This is roughly half an hour of battery life less than Mac OS X.

  • The backup utility bundled with Windows 7 Ultimate couldn't backup my hard drive for some reason--the backup always failed with the error "The system cannot find the file specified. (0x80070002)". I'm still looking for a solution to this problem.

  • The Cisco VPN client is not supported on 64-bit versions of Windows. Fortunately Windows 7 provides a Windows XP Mode for running legacy applications. The Cisco VPN client works fine in Windows XP Mode on the MacBook Pro.

  • (Update) I have problems connecting my MacBook Pro to a projector - sometimes Windows 7 would not detect the projector properly and it would support only 640x480 output. The same problem was reported by other users. I hope Apple fixes this soon.


Overall, 64-bit Windows 7 works very well on a MacBook Pro--Windows 7 boots quickly, feels very responsive, and it seems to take full advantage of the fast solid state hard drive and the huge amount of installed RAM (8GB). Kudos to Microsoft for an operating system that's very nicely done.





Disclaimer:
Views and opinions expressed in this blog are the author's, and do not necessarily represent those of ZDNet Asia.

Tags: Apple MacBook Pro, 64-bit, Apple Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate, Microsoft Windows 7, Apple Macintosh, Apple Mac OS, Cisco VPN Client, backup, Apple MacBook

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Talkback 3 comments

Windows 7 works great on the MacBook Pro
My concern is simple in you said "I'm happy to report that it installed smoothly and worked great for the past three weeks", it worked great for 3 weeks and then it crashed or started giving problems ?? please specify ??
Posted by Omar on Wednesday, September 02 2009 11:35 PM

Windows 7 works great on the MacBook Pro
Hi Omar: My MacBook Pro running 64-bit Windows 7 is still working fine today - I use it every day. The final version of Windows 7 was released to Microsoft developers only 3 weeks ago, so my experience with Windows 7 was based on the 3 weeks that I was actually using Windows 7.
Posted by Lee Lup Yuen on Thursday, September 03 2009 08:04 AM

Windows 7 works great on the MacBook Pro
I tried installing windows 7 proffesional RTM which i got from MSDNAA,but when the installation begins,it gives me error sayin that devices drivers are required for CD/DVD drive and teh installation doesnt go forward.I have installed snow leopard and am using the bootcamp version 3.0/
can someone help me out in this.
Posted by Hardik Kothari on Monday, September 07 2009 05:38 AM

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About the blogger

Lee Lup Yuen

Lee Lup Yuen



Lee Lup Yuen is passionate about mobile phones and PDAs, as he is constantly buying new gadgets and programming them in J2ME, .NET, Symbian and AppForge. He has developed commercial applications with mobile technologies like SMS, MMS, WAP, 3G video streaming and location-based services.

Tags

  1. 3g
  2. 64 - bit
  3. api
  4. apple iphone
  5. apple mac os
  6. apple macbook
  7. cell phone
  8. google inc.
  9. gps
  10. internet
  11. java
  12. microsoft windows
  13. microsoft windows 7
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  15. mobile
  16. nokia corp.
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