![]() Obtain a licensed copy of Windows 10 on an ISO image or an install DVD.Download the Boot Camp Windows Support Software on a USB flash drive.The procedure can be broken down into a few macro steps: The method that looked the most interesting to me, despite its length and many many steps, is the one outlined by OWC in their blog: Tech Tip: How to Use Boot Camp on an External Drive. The method I followed, with a few additional notes And indeed, using an external drive with Boot Camp is possible, but all the methods I’ve found tend to be a bit convoluted. ![]() So I started looking for solutions on the Web. I didn’t want that because, a) it seemed a bit too disruptive an option, given that by now the internal drive of my iMac is 60% full and b) my iMac’s internal drive isn’t an SSD or a Fusion Drive, just a regular 5400rpm hard drive, and I didn’t like the idea of stressing it too much with a Mac OS/Windows dual-boot setup. I wanted to configure a separate Windows installation on an external SSD unit, but Boot Camp only lets you create a partition on the Mac’s internal drive. I was disappointed in finding how, 14 years after, Boot Camp still retains a certain inflexibility. So, for the first time since Apple introduced it in 2006, I took a good look at Boot Camp. And while it’s not as powerful as the most recent PC offerings, it still has respectable specs to run more demanding titles. In the end it was either buying a dedicated gaming laptop, or turning my 2017 iMac 21.5‑inch 4K into a Windows gaming machine. ![]() While several indie titles run surprisingly okay, the more demanding stuff is simply unplayable. Which means it definitely isn’t a gaming machine. My most powerful Windows machine is the 2014 ThinkPad X240, which is roughly equivalent in specs to a MacBook Air of the same vintage. Unfortunately, that often means Windows-only games. Then there’s gaming, another interest of mine that has stayed dormant for a while, but was awakened in recent times due to the surprising amount of good-quality triple‑A games. Ultimately, as I often reiterated as of late, today in tech we should keep our options open, and being proficient in more than one platform can only be beneficial. But I’m also very interested in what Microsoft has in stock for the Surface line, with the Neo and Duo devices coming later this year. I arrived to desktop Windows via mobile Windows - my surprisingly satisfactory explorations with Windows Phone 8.1 and Windows 10 Mobile in 2017–2018. I tend to prefer separate devices to perform certain tasks, and when it came to reacquaint myself with the Windows platform after many years ignoring it completely, instead of going the virtualisation route, I opted for acquiring a couple of vintage ThinkPad laptops initially a T61, followed by a T400 (now a Windows 8.1 machine), and an X240, my Windows 10 machine.įor those who have noticed my increasing criticism towards Apple in recent years, my interest in Windows may seem connected to that dissatisfaction, but this is true only in part, a very small part.
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