On Fri, 2011-07-01 at 15:15 +0200, Christopher Svanefalk wrote: > On 07/01/2011 02:48 PM, Gary Waters wrote: > > On 07/01/2011 08:37 AM, Christopher Svanefalk wrote: > >> On 07/01/2011 01:55 PM, Gary Waters wrote: > >>> I have a friend with an intel-based i-mac. He seems interested in trying > >>> linux. I assume fedora can be installed on Mac and it can also dualboot? > >>> The google info was a bit sketchy. Answers on this list tend to be far > >>> more precise. > >>> > >>> GW. > >> I tried doing this back in the day (2009), and it worked so-so. I have > >> not tried with more recent releases of Fedora. > >> > >> I opened a feature request on the issue, and I think you might be able > >> to find some helpful in the discussion on that page: > >> > >> https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=503149 > > So, in a word, no... it is not a seemless, flawless, noobie-friendly, > > happy puppies dancing with butterflies endeavour with my friend not at > > risk of losing data and/or his OSX installation. ;-) > > > > Why is it so difficult? Would this be a bios related restriction?\ I am running F15 on my 2010 macbook air without problems. Even the wireless works with the staging drivers. I have to use the binary nvidia driver as the mba display needs dithering. I gave up on running F15 on the 2011 imac because after installation I could not get it to boot properly. That probably due to the linux partitions being out of reach for legacy grub. It runs just fine from the live CD. Currently EFI booting on mac seems to be a hit and miss, it does not work for my on either the mba as the imac. Moral of the story is with some careful disk partitioning and some work you should be able to run F15 on a mac. Jurgen -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines