![]() In 2006, Apple released the Boot Camp Assistant, a multi-boot utility that enables users to install Microsoft Windows operating systems on Intel-based Mac computers. And if you want AppleSoftwareUpdate, run it FIRST because it will want to roll back drivers already installed above.Apple has confirmed that Boot Camp, which lets users switch between MacOS and Windows, will not be available on its new ARM-based computers. UPDATE: do NOT run BootCamp.msi it will also stall out on RealTek. Run installers individually on the command line~~, or try the master BootCamp msi~~ Run the Command Prompt app AS ADMINISTRATOR (find it in Start Menu -> All Apps -> Windows System right-click with your external mouse -> More. Still cracking this nut myself, but I suspect the solution path will be Trying to run the install packages individually doesn't seem to do much running the master setup app complains about lacking privileges. if you have a MacBook with only Iris embedded graphics, the AMD and NVidia installers will be unhappy.īy the time you get through Cirrus, you should at least have audio playback (at least, I did on a 13" MBP), other folders install their respective functionality. Go through all directories within Drivers EXCEPT "Apple" and run any Setup msi or exe files you find. This is probably D:, and I will assume it IS D: for the remaining steps. Use File Explorer (should be in your start bar) to navigate to the USB drive BootCamp assembled. Restart, hold option to force boot options and select Windows (if you haven't installed yet, select the install USB BootCamp put together restart the list once you've gotten to the RealTek failure) You'll need an external USB generic mouse for right-click navigating Windows for the momentįorce-kill the BootCamp installer from the task manager (if you've gotten that far) ![]() Installation proceeds as usual from here, and appears to successfully hook everything up, even the trackpad gestures :)Īlso getting the same problem. Once BootCamp hits the RealTek step, it will launch your surrogate exe instead. RENAME whatever exe you just copied to RealtekSetup.exe (you see where I’m going here yes, it is that stupid…)Ĭlick through the “stopped working” alert when it happens (we’ve mucked with the packages, there were bound to be repercussions this one seems benign) Take another benign installer exe, say D:\BootCamp\Drivers\Apple\AppleNullDriver64.exe, copy it, and paste it into D:\BootCamp\Drivers\RealTek RENAME RealtekSetup.exe to LiterallyAnythingElse.exe (read that as you will, just don’t keep the exe name the same) Run RealtekSetup.exe to manually (and successfully) install RealTek (which I’m not sure is even needed, actually, but just in case) Navigate to (assuming your BootCamp USB drive is D:) D:\BootCamp\Drivers\RealTek This will have the side-effect of installing Apple Software Update, but is mainly to trigger an unwind of the prior failed BootCamp install. Open File Explorer (from the Start bar) and navigate to (assuming your BootCamp USB drive is D:) D:\BootCamp\Drivers\Apple Restart so Windows doesn’t think you’re still installing Start/Windows menu -> All Apps -> Windows System -> Task Manager Hold option at startup to force-boot into Windows and/or the install USB as needed to get to the point where you get hung up on the RealTek driver. Refined solution (not fully tested, but ought to work if not, do all of my first set of steps steps and then come back and do this set that’s the path I took):
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