Elerrina said:For dual booting a Mac, currently the only alternative (that I know of) is using parallels. This will allow you to use Windows and Ubuntu . You can find out more here as I have never really tried it so I'm not that much of an expert at this point in time.
However, if you are using a laptop (such as a MacBook or MacBook Pro), I'm fairly certain you can only use Bootcamp as parallels are hardware.
steven said:And Bigred how would I know if my machine could do it, its about 3 years old, but its an Alienware. Has a Intel Core 2 Duo CPU T9300 @ 2.5GHz 2.5GHz, so I dont know if thats an i2 or what? And is that a compatible machine?
Elerrina said:For dual booting a Mac, currently the only alternative (that I know of) is using parallels. This will allow you to use Windows and Ubuntu . You can find out more here as I have never really tried it so I'm not that much of an expert at this point in time. <BR sab="763"><BR sab="764">However, if you are using a laptop (such as a MacBook or MacBook Pro), I'm fairly certain you can only use Bootcamp as parallels are hardware.