
Possibly harder than getting the superdrive fixed. Getting Windows installed without your superdrive working sounds difficult. Sorry, the drivers linked from my pages help you get all the apple hardware working properly AFTER you have got Windows up and running. Finally, open the folder you just created, and run the setup.exe.Create an empty folder on your desktop, and drag them out into it. Now, either: Mount it by double clicking it-should work in Windows 7-or else by getting hold of PowerISO or similar OR use 7-zip again to open this ISO file, and extract the contents to a folder.Now, extract this o.Apple_ISO to the desktop (or somewhere) and rename it to Apple.ISO.Eventually, several levels down, you'll get to a file called 0.Apple_ISO or some such.just keep clicking down the levels of nested folders. Inside that another folder, which you double click. Inside is a folder, which you double click.Inside you'll find a Payload file and a few other files. The answer is to get a copy of 7-zip, which is free, and which is your 'Swiss army knife' to open the Apple. As of now, none of the Apple Silicon based Macs support Windows through Bootcamp.If you've downloaded bootcamp drivers for Macs to run Windows 7 or 8, but have done the download in Windows, you may be stuck on how to open the downloaded BootCampESD.pkg file you've now got. Last year, the company announced the transition to Apple Silicon for the Mac and as part of that transition, has released a couple of Mac computers with its own silicon. While Apple is moving away from Intel, it continues to support its machines powered by Intel and has also promised to do so for five year or so. Only the Mac machines that have Apple’s T2 chip will support the use of Microsoft’s Precision Touchpad drivers on Bootcamp running Windows operating system. The company also notes that only select Mac computers will be able to run Microsoft Precision Touchpad drivers. It took Apple almost eight years to support touchpad drivers for Windows operating systems running on a Mac computer. However, the drivers continue to be used in the current Windows 10 version as well – renamed as Microsoft Precision Touchpad drivers. The company had released the software in partnership with Intel to improve the trackpad experience on devices running Windows 8.1 at the time. Microsoft first introduced Windows Precision Touchpad drivers back in 2013, as a move to fix the trackpad issues on most Windows powered laptops.
