Verwendest du Boot Camp, um aus Microsoft Windows zu starten, ändere die Startvolume-Einstellungen Schalte deinen Mac anschließend aus, oder starte ihn neu und versuche es erneut. Deaktiviere zunächst das Firmware-Passwort. The Origin Omni, which hits all the right marks, but also happens to cost north of 5K, is currently sold out and cross your fingers you don't have any major problems and have to ship it back too. Einige Tastenkombinationen funktionieren nicht, wenn der Mac ein Firmware-Passwort verwendet. One the HP Z1G2, which is *almost* perfect, except that HP will void your warranty the moment you decide you want something other than what's on their al la carte sheet, which is filled with Xeon's and Quadros, and it's been discontinued and replaced by the G3 which is now just another flimsy AIO with weak Graphics I believe the highest end is now a Quadro M2000M with 640 shaders. What's the point? I just thought it was bit ridiculous to go and blow $2500+ on an AIO with a huge 1080p display. When I bought mine earlier in the year, the only other AIO with comparable GPU horse power was MSI's 6QE, having a 980M was great, but then they went and cheaped out on a 27" 1080p display. Apple puts more graphics hardware into their entire lineup than most other OEM's do. Blizzard did that with World of Warcraft back in July, and it made a huge difference in performance.Ĭlick to expand.It's weakness is expandability, not graphics power. They'll also add to it with downloadable content packs (at least 4, based on the digital deluxe edition) - all that gives Aspyr plenty of incentive to add Metal support. Compared to the average game that comes and goes in a span of months or even weeks, Civ is a big-budget A-list title that tends to stay a strong seller for years after release. It first debuted for iOS devices, and encouraged by the performance (as well as developer response) they developed Metal for OSX (now called macOS) in 2015 for the release of El Capitan.Ĭurrently, Civilization 6 for Mac does not support Metal - but I think that the OS requirement of El Capitan or later signals Aspyr's intent to eventually get there. A few years ago, they finally bit the bullet and began development of their own low-level API, called Metal. It can be trickier to work with, but since the program is accessing the hardware directly it tends to be faster.įor years, Apple has only offered OpenGL support and there just wasn't really any low-level API available. Microsoft's DirectX is an example of a low level API, it provides more direct access to the graphics hardware. On the plus side it's generally considered to be easier to work with (when coding), but on the down side it's slower. Third-party applications can enable write support for these partitions, while you can also share files in other ways. Thankfully, there are ways around these file-system limitations. OpenGL is an example of a high level API, it runs on top of the operating system. Both Windows and Mac OS X can see each others files, but they cant write to the other operating systems partition. Basically, there are two types of graphics tech (also called an API, or application programming interface): low-level an high-level. It has nothing to do with one OS being better than another, and everything to do with the underlying graphics tech being used. But it's worth a shot if you want to save some money.It should absolutely run faster under Windows/Bootcamp on the same machine. The process is a bit trickier than setting up virtual machines in Parallels Desktop and Fusion for Mac, and VirtualBox lacks the bells and whistles of the other two programs. You can install the Mac version of VirtualBox in OS X and then set up Windows 10 as a virtual machine. Database giant Oracle offers a virtual machine utility called VirtualBox, which supports Windows 10. Priced at $63, VMware Fusion 7 is also compatible with Windows 10 and available as a trial version that you can test drive for 30 days. Selling for $80, Parallels Desktop 10 for Mac supports Windows 10 and is available as an evaluation version that you can try for free for 14 days. Two virtual machine applications that support the Mac are Parallels Desktop for Mac and VMware Fusion for Mac. With a virtual machine, you set aside enough disk space and memory to install and run Windows. That gives Windows its own slice of real estate so you can use it without having to shut down your Mac OS, reboot or maintain a dual-boot scenario. You can set up Windows in a virtual machine inside your Mac OS. There is another way to run both Mac OS X and Windows on your Mac computer.