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Probably because it needs an executable file. Try burning the ISO onto a CD or USB drive. Then navigate to the file called "wubi.exe" (located wherever you burned the ISO) in the VirtualBox thing when it asks you for it.
You can use Boot Camp which comes with your Mac or you can use another program like VirtualBox but to do either of them, you need to download a Windows ISO (International Organization for Standardization)
Download an ISO of the Mac OS CD, and then burn that ISO with Nero to the CD. It will be an exact copy of that disc. If the ISO was copied from a bootable CD then the copy you burn will be bootable.
yes....however make sure that you download the version for mac and it should be a .zip file or a .dmg file. if it is .exe, then it is a windows file and wont work
first go on that song what you have to do download then click on that file the download option is given
DAA Converter converts GBI files (they're just disguised DAAs) to ISO format so they can be accessed on your Mac: http://www.twilightedge.com/mac/daaconverter/
Yes. Some distributions, for example Ubuntu, ship a Mac-specific ISO file to use, due to the intricacies of Apple hardware.
You need to use a piece of software capable of understanding an ISO file, or burn the file to a disk. You can use Gizmo for Windows, both the 32- and 64-bit, from here: arainia.com/software/gizmo/download.html. The latest versions of Windows, Linux, and Mac OS will allow you to burn the ISO file to a disk; once you've done so, you can use it as a regular disk. Linux allows an ISO to be mounted directly into the root file system using the "mount" command.
Best way is to install it on virtualbox or vm workstation .
Yes in fact if you have an Intel mac you can download the 32 bit iso and run it. If you have a powerpc you can use Ubuntu if you go into the downloads for a release you will see a powerpc option.
A .dmg file is a Mac disc image Its is basically a file that is an image of a disk, it can be mounted like a disk. It is much like a .iso image file seen a lot, except it supports compression and encryption. It is actually so much like an .iso with these extra features that there exists software packages that easily convert them back and forth.
Computer aplications for Windows are in the .exe file format; for Mac there are in the .dmg file format.