

Apple provides native drivers for the hardware under Windows.Apple supports this as a way to boot Windows.There are several advantages to using Apple's process:
#Mac os sierra skin for linux mint install
Install Apple's Boot CampĪpple provides a supported method of installing Windows as a dual-boot option for Macintosh owners. However, several of the steps in that guide I didn't have to use at all, so I'm documenting my process here. To be fair, a lot of my instructions and the guide I initially followed, can be found here. Install rEFInd as a Boot Manager for all 3 OSes.Install Linux (I used Kali) into the newly freed space.Use Windows 10 to shrink the Bootcamp partition, freeing up space to install Linux.


Needless to say, I failed miserably when I opted to have Kali install Grub and it overwrote my primary Boot Manager on the Mac and rendered the system unbootable (and eventually unrecoverable). So, I set about working on a dual-boot scenario. I originally thought I'd just build it into a Virtual Machine (using Parallels), but was concerned that I might not have the control over the hardware that I'd need in order to make Kali effective as a learning environment. I recently decided to run Kali Linux on my MacBook.
