Sell MBA and buy Windows 8 machine? / Windows 8 in Boot Camp


Recommended Posts

I too have found that running Windows 7 on my mid-2009 MBP would eat up battery life a lot faster than Mac OS X. I buy that it is probably due to Apple not properly supporting things with their "bootcamp" drivers.

That being said, I found that performance was about what I expected. In general games ran faster in Windows than they did in OS X. If my MBP was plugged into the wall there weren't any real issues. But I much prefer OS X and eventually just erased my windows partition. I kind of set it up for when I wanted to work at home, but since I have a Windows laptop for work I would prefer to use that. So with that I'd probably just recommend getting a proper Windows laptop if you want to run Windows. Apple's attitude has been that their driver support is just good enough to keep saying it is a feature. I doubt that will change.

Thank you for the very detailed instruction. but my question remains: how good is windows 8 on a late 2010 macbook air?

It will run just fine!! Don't expect to be doing any gaming or visually intense stuff but once it's installed it is definitely a smoother, faster and less battery hogging experience!

Sell the MBP and get a WIN8 PC.

Thinkpad X1 Carbon is a great machine.

Acer Aspire S7 - 13.3 or 11.6" both 1080p displays. - This would be on the top of my list at the moment for this form factor. Has touch display.

The Asus Zenbook UX31E or the UX31A are nice machines as well.

You can wipe completely OSX and install Windows 8 native.

Don't use Bootcamp. One thing for sure, your graphics card will see a huge improvement.

NO YOU CAN'T! ALL NON-OEM COPIES OF WINDOWS 8 ARE UPGRADE ONLY! IT'S IN THE EULA. OTHERWISE YOU ARE COMMITING SOFTWARE PIRACY AND I WILL REPORT YOU TO [email protected]! JUST FYI!

I should further note that someone else here (in a different post) said that your Mac will automatically look for an EFI Based Operating System on the Hard Drive and will NOT start looking for Windows 8 for another 20-30 seconds (and I can Confirm that it's True).

The better replacement for MBA 11" is Surface Pro imho

Core i5, 1080p screen, 64gig-128gig store, usb 3.0 plus the price will be around $799-$999 at best

I should further note that someone else here (in a different post) said that your Mac will automatically look for an EFI Based Operating System on the Hard Drive and will NOT start looking for Windows 8 for another 20-30 seconds (and I can Confirm that it's True).

not true, I've seen videos on youtube, win 8 boot very fast on MBA, see this one for example :

Given that Apple machines retain their value pretty well you could resell it and get a pretty tidy Windows 8 machine with the money you make. And you'd probably stand a better chance of ongoing driver support than you're likely to get from Apple.

Did it work?

Not really. I tried doing a clean install and had issues with the screen blacking out randomly. Then I tried as an upgrade from Windows 7 and didn't even have a functioning touchpad and the screen kept going out and I got a blue screen if I pressed F2. So the method worked, but the hardware didn't.

I should further note that someone else here (in a different post) said that your Mac will automatically look for an EFI Based Operating System on the Hard Drive and will NOT start looking for Windows 8 for another 20-30 seconds (and I can Confirm that it's True).

Windows 8 on my Macbook Pro boots in about 10 seconds on an SSD. I mentioned this in another thread, but it's practically faster for me to switch OSs than run a VM.

NO YOU CAN'T! ALL NON-OEM COPIES OF WINDOWS 8 ARE UPGRADE ONLY! IT'S IN THE EULA. OTHERWISE YOU ARE COMMITING SOFTWARE PIRACY AND I WILL REPORT YOU TO [email protected]! JUST FYI!

They are upgrades to previous versions of WINDOWS, not upgrades to OSX...

I run both (Mountain Lion and Windows 8) on my rMBP and overall, everything works. It is very fast and I came from Windows from about 2 years now.

I don't think touch-screens are for powerful OSes.

The only thing I would like OSX to support is the great file management and copying that Windows (mainly Win8) has. It is superb. The rest I rather stay with Apple.

First: Massive LOL at boot camp slowing grapics down.

Secondly: The hardware inside the Apple machine is standard hardware!!!!! The drivers are not Apple drivers for things like the graphics card and chipsets.... Touchpad and whatnot Apple have created them.

Thirdly: If you don't like the Apple supplied drivers download the drivers from the hardware manufacture, Apple don't make Linux drivers but you can install ubuntu and find the correct drivers for your Macbook.

Lastly: Performance will be the same as any other computer with the same specs! The battery life will be worse.

a windows 8 laptop with touchscreen, you really are dillusional. Only a crazy people would want to touch a screen to use windows. It would take forever to do anything and you would get repetative strain injury. If you love win8 so much just sell your macbook and get a windows 8 laptop without a touchscreen or Wait for an arm ultrathin notebook with windows 8 if you must have a device as thin as your macbook air.

:rofl:

To the OP, it's safe to ignore this guy.

Honestly I don't like the idea of a touch screen desktop or laptop myself. I think overall its not good for operation and ergonomics.

I am however very interested in getting Windows 8 to work on my mbp because I will be using dual boot as I do with Windows 7 now

Um...what? When you use Bootcamp, you are running windows natively. Bootcamp is not a virtual machine. I can max any game I want to even in Bootcamp. If you have the Mac Pro like I do, you do not need to even install the bootcamp drivers since I have all Windows and Mac compatible accessories.

I think they meant to say without a boot selector... too many people think the main boot OS is the "native" os, no idea where that idea came from

The better replacement for MBA 11" is Surface Pro imho

Core i5, 1080p screen, 64gig-128gig store, usb 3.0 plus the price will be around $799-$999 at best

not true, I've seen videos on youtube, win 8 boot very fast on MBA, see this one for example :

I meant to say that if you put Windows 8 all by itself on a Mac, it will take 20-30 seconds before it starts looking for Windows 8, at least that was my experience with my Mid Year 2010 Mac Mini.

  • 4 weeks later...

Bootcamp is not virtual machine, yet OSX still exists, that is the reason I said natively, without OSX involved.

But you will NOT see a difference in your performance in BootCamp or Native. It simply wont make a difference. If you use the same driver, you will see the exact same performance.

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Posts

    • Depends on what you need. Might be a bit clearer on what you plan to do with it. Sort of a waste if you get the newest and greatest, but don't know how to use it.
    • NTLite 2026.06.11200 by Razvan Serea NTLite is a Windows configuration tool that allows you to modify your existing Windows install or an image yet to be deployed, remove Windows components, configure and integrate, speed up the Windows deployment process. Reduce Windows footprint on your RAM and storage drive memory. Remove components of your choice, guarded by compatibility safety mechanisms, which speed up finding that sweet spot. Windows Unattended feature support, providing many commonly used options on a single page for easy setup. Easily integrate a single or multiple drivers, update or language packages. Package integration features smart sorting, enabling you to seamlessly add packages for integration and the tool will apply them in the appropriate order, keeping hotfix compatibility in check. One of the important new features of NTLite (compared to its predecessors) is the ability to modify an already installed the operating system, by removing unnecessary components. Supports Windows 11, 10, 8.1 and 7, x86 and x64, live and image. Server editions of the same versions, excluding support for component removals and feature configuration. ARM64 image support in the alpha stage. Does not support Checked/Debug, Embedded, IoT editions, nor Vista or XP. NTLite 2026.06.11200 changelog: New Secure Boot Migration support: Verification, certificate staging, and boot-manager/sector update across the Image, Updates, Apply, and Create-ISO pages (2023 CA migration, optional 2011 revocation, Anti-rollback, Boot sector choice etc) Secure Boot Host Readiness: Live host Secure Boot migration monitor and Servicing-task control Option under Image page - C:\Windows row, or load the host as the target - Updates - Secure Boot Image: 'Sort mounted images first' option for the image list in Menu-Settings UI: Hover description card for Components and Unattended pages, selectable text and quick access to Compatibility options Command line: Relay commands into the already-running instance Enables controlling already running NTLite via ntlite.exe Use /NewInstance to launch an additional instance using CLI operations (premium) UI: 'New instance' option via main menu instead of a secondary ntlite.exe prompt Apply: Hide individual Apply-page notes with a per-note dismiss (X), critical excluded Settings: 'Unsigned RDP file launch warnings' tweak (RDP client), bypassing the April 2026 security-update prompt on RDP connections Upgrade Image: Live OS and deployed image editing now unlocked on free/test licenses, same licensing as images Image: 'Recompress' option in manual dialog Remove Editions to shrink the WIM in one session Image: SWM part size set inline on the Apply page and image dialogs, split-size popup retired Image: Relative 'Last change' dates; editions grouped by build time to reduce noise Image: 'Forget - Missing' on the Edit-cache menu to mass drop entries whose folder is gone Components: Root groups reorganized - user-facing groups first, system/critical last Components: Show filter options to view components by Template or App-type, since Apps are now merged into groups Presets: Delete confirmation now lists the multi-selected preset names UI: Design update propagated to the rest of the tool UI: Filter and search match words in any order and partially, better results filtering Components Unattended: Input-locale language derives from the user locale, with an independent keyboard picker, enables combinations previously unavailable Unattended: Input-locale now allows for a user value override Unattended: Localization OOBE WinPE now can be copied with the new WinPE Copy OOBE localization toggle, enter locale settings once for both stages Updates: Downloader greys and locks updates the image already carries (hotfix and MSIX) Updates: Resume interrupted update downloads Command line: Many upgrades, see /?, now prints help to the console or redirected output UI-Translation: Finnish language added, also thanks for Chinese Traditional (Matt), French (tistou77), Italian (clarensio), Russian (RDS), Swedish (1FF), Vietnamese (Vu Anh Vu) Fix Components: Containers removal breaking Apps deployment Components: Microsoft Account had leftovers when Easy Migrate is kept Image: Export to an existing WIM improvements, Append renamed to Merge Image: Improved 26H1 live removal support Image: No more 'X:\ not accessible' popup for certain drives during image scan Presets: Manual image refresh picks up presets added/removed outside the app Tweaks: Disabled visual-effect animations no longer return after first logon on a new profile Tweaks: Live Visual Effects toggles (animations, drag full windows, font smoothing) now apply correctly Download: NTLite 2026.06.11200 | 20.5 MB (Free, paid upgrade available) Link: NTLite Home Page | NTLite Features | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • Ah. La Fontana De Incontinentia ! Bella ! Bella !
    • Hi everyone, I'm planning a small network upgrade and was wondering how others prepare their networks for future needs. Do you usually invest in higher-speed switches and better cabling from the start, or do you upgrade only when necessary? I'd be interested in hearing what has worked well for you and any lessons you've learned over time. Thanks!
    • Greetings and welcome!!
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Year In
      BA the Curmudgeon earned a badge
      One Year In
    • Conversation Starter
      rosiecharles earned a badge
      Conversation Starter
    • First Post
      KMilenkoski1202 earned a badge
      First Post
    • First Post
      carols23 earned a badge
      First Post
    • One Month Later
      Tom Willson earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      500
    2. 2
      +Edouard
      257
    3. 3
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      151
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      93
    5. 5
      macoman
      67
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!