- #Winclone for mac 10.6 full how to
- #Winclone for mac 10.6 full install
- #Winclone for mac 10.6 full update
Welcome to Monday and a new work week! If we roll back the calendar 54 years, we come to the day that Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore founded Intel.
#Winclone for mac 10.6 full update
Resources we have at hand consist of SCCM 2012 R2, MDT 2012 Update 1, and Mac Server 10.6.8.
#Winclone for mac 10.6 full how to
I inherited this from my predecessor who (it appears) used Deployment Studio to craft the external hard drive solution and was working on fashioning some sort of network-boot solution as well.Īs I am not at all very well-versed in Mac, here are my questions: Does the above theory seem plausible? If so, does anyone have any suggestions as to how to make this work? Is Deployment Studio a reasonable idea?
#Winclone for mac 10.6 full install
If it is possible to configure boot camp to default to the Windows installation instead of the OS X one, that would be a definite plus.Ĭurrently, we are using an external hard drive to make this happen (except the SCCM client install and domain join steps).
From there, I plan to let SCCM take over and install all of the programs, updates, etc for Windows 7 in a post-imaging phase (as in, after the netboot stuff is done and we're looking at a logged-in Windows desktop screen). If all of this is possible, then I should be able to create a Windows 7 image that has the SCCM client on it and is domain-joined. It is my hope that whatever netboot-based imaging solution Apple provides is capable of pushing out a "boot camp with Windows 7" setup. It sounds reasonable that some type of Mac imaging solution should be able to do network installs using netboot. I have a theory as to how I think it may be possible but don't have anything solid behind that theory yet, which is why I am coming here looking for suggestions. I am looking for an imaging solution that allows for network installations of OSX 10.8.4 along with a boot camp partition that can support Windows 7 which SCCM can then manage post-install. So, here's the deal: I work in an environment that runs on Apple hardware but uses Microsoft software, and I have been asked to find a way to get an Apple desktop from out-of-the-box to user-ready as automated as possible.