I did need sighted assistance. Or at least I used sighted assistance, although I have a theory that you could do the bootcamp install with an answer file. Then you would only need some one to click you through your driver instalations.

I like fusion personally. After trying both rather extensively I found advantages and disadvantages to both. The reason I ultimately went for fusion was first a desire to run mac os for most of my day-to- day computing and not to have to reboot to do some chore in windows,
Second, better file sharing between mac os and windows,
and third, a nice keybord driver in fusion that let me keep my number pad on the right side of the keybord so I could use window-eyes.
Fusion costs $75.  If you are on a tight bugget that might be a factor.

Best,

erik

erik burggraaf

Certified Technician
Assistive Computing LTD Support and training
Sales department: 888-828-2445
Support and Training: 888-255-5194
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Website coming soon



On 22-May-08, at 8:40 PM, Ryan Mann wrote:

Before you start using Boot Camp, are you aware of Vmware Fusion? Vmware Fusion allows you to run Windows in a virtual machine and you can install it without sighted assistance. I believe you need sighted assistance to install Windows under Boot Camp.

On May 22, 2008, at 10:17 PM, Dave Wright wrote:

Hey there all,
I'm well on my way to switching to a mac and I think I've managed to convince my girlfriend to do the same. As such, we will be definite beginners. In order to switch from PC to Mac, I'm still going to be running a copy of windows with bootCamp. I'm wondering first how well this works? Second, how much does bootCamp run for? Finally, how hard is it for a blind person to set up a windows installation with bgootCamp? Thanks all for your help.


 Best Regards,
 David Wright
Mobile: (832)518-0707
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.knfbreader.com





Reply via email to