How to get boot camp for Mac OS X Tiger?

June 30th, 2009 | by admin |

I have Tiger not leopard (yes i know it is old) I want to play RTS and FPS games with my friends but i have a Mac can someone please get me a link. Thanks. This would really help me a lot.

This says you can’t:

http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=484593

It’s no longer supported. You will have to play P2P a friend.

  1. 2 Responses to “How to get boot camp for Mac OS X Tiger?”

  2. By Phlebit on Jul 1, 2009 | Reply

    This says you can’t:

    http://forums.macrumors.com/showthread.php?t=484593

    It’s no longer supported. You will have to play P2P a friend.
    References :

  3. By SilverTonguedDevil on Jul 1, 2009 | Reply

    First off, you can’t install Windows directly on a PPC Mac. You need an Intel Mac. Which Mac do you have? For a PPC Mac, you need to download and install Q (kju) from the first link below. If you have an Intel Mac, read on.

    Some virtual machine emulators can facilitate installing Windows on an Intel Mac, such as VMWare or Parallels.

    There is a version of Boot Camp available from the third link below. Give it a try.

    No version of Boot Camp is available for download from Apple. Before Leopard, Apple offered Boot Camp Beta for download but no longer. Even if you could download Boot Camp Beta from someone other than Apple, it has a built-in expiration for October 26, 2007 (2007-10-26). The final version of Boot Camp is on the Leopard DVD.

    The name "Boot Camp" is a bit of a misnomer. It doesn’t really facilitate booting to anything except in the sense that it installs a Boot Camp control panel for Windows where you can choose your startup drive volume ("partition"). The main problem is getting Mac drivers. Windows has most or all of the drivers for Mac Mini hardware but a MacBook or Mac Pro needs some sort of disc with drivers for Windows. If you are lucky, the Boot Camp download at the link below will have drivers for your MacBook or MBP.

    If you have a Leopard DVD, you are good to go. Even if you have Tiger and Windows installed but don’t want to upgrade to Leopard, you can use a Leopard DVD to install the drivers that Windows needs. The driver installation comes directly from the Leopard disc now (while booted to Windows), not from a burned driver CD. Alternately, you can burn a driver CD if you know how to extract the Windows driver files from the Leopard DVD.
    References :
    http://www.kju-app.org/
    http://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=306583
    http://www.soft32.com/download_200398.html

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