Today's topic is, "Tips for using MacBook". [Making an acrostic poem] Mac, Maxbon, take the plastic off. Book, book, read one while eating the Maxbon, Tasty. [Mac (Maxbon), Book (promotional code to use it in the bookstores), and Air (Nike Air)] [L?: Stop making fun of me.] Hello, this is ITSub. As a long time MacBook user, now I use macOS more frequently that Windows, no, mainly every day. I've been using MacBooks for about 7 years. What I thought as I moved from mainly using Windows to macOS is, that you cannot use macOS alone in Korea, and there were many circumstances I needed Windows. Especially for the gamers. And as I've been doing a YouTube channel for quite long, so many future users of MacBook asked how to make use of Windows on Mac, so today, I will talk about the three ways to make use of Windows and mac at the same time. You can use these methods not only on MacBook Pro, but also on MacBook Air, MacBook or iMac. First, the program that I use the most is 'Parallels Desktop'. It's a kind of a virtualizing program that enables to run Windows in mac. So it's the same concept as you open a tab in mac and run Windows on it. There are two popular virtualizing programs for mac is 'Parallels' and 'VMWare' I've used both of them for quite a long time, the one that ends up with an actual use is 'Parallels' since it's focused on the personal uses and made more convenient to that, so I've been using 'Parallels' only for quite a while. However, Good news is that 'VMWare Fusion 12 Player' is going to be released around late October, and there's a rumor that the personal version is going to be free for this one. Would I finally be able to escape from 'Parallels' now then? Then I'll show you an example of how I use it. There's a thing called 'My Boot Camp' here, and if I double-click on it, like this, a new Windows gets started. You can see that the booting speed is not slow and it gets into Windows very quick. I've set 'Parallels' to a single area, so I've set it up to be mac on the left and Windows on the right like this. So while using mac, if you thought 'I need to use Windows', then you can move the screen to the right and use Internet Explorer right away, then move back to the left and use mac. You can easily use it moving in between mac and Windows. It can be used in various ways. For example, if you use it in a smaller tab not on a full screen, you can adjust it, like this. Adjust it like this and you can easily move the files by dragging them. You can share the files easily like this. The advantages of 'Parallels' in my opinion are that one, you don't need to reboot the device, it lets you to freely use Windows by running a program. Also it's made in a decent quality to use 'Parallels' in mac, it's very convenient to switch between the systems. So, like this, the layout that I use is to make it a full screen and make it mac on the left and Windows on the right. I am using both of them like this. But since 'Parallels' is a virtualization program, they have some downsides, too. The biggest one is their vicious policy. They update the versions every year and the problem is that it's not for a single payment, you have to pay for the newly updated version every year. Of course, you can use it without updating it. But you have to purchase it after using it for 4~5 years since they don't support the new versions of macOS. And it doesn't show enough performance to play a game on it, and since it's virtualizing it and assigns its CPU, RAM and the storage to Windows, it's hard to keep them both all the time when using the virtualization. [It slows down the speed.] And it's comfortable to use for its virtualization but it's low in its stability, so it was impossible to access the virtual circuits from some websites. The second is 'Boot Camp' which is the easiest and most comfortable way to use. First of all, turn Parallels off, Not many people know about this, but this is a Windows installing program that is officially supported by Apple and it is free. Of course, the Windows license is not included. If you install it by yourself, it's gonna be more convenient than you thought and it's easy to use. So Boot Camp assigns a part of the storage and set it to a partition for Windows, and it makes all the process much easier from installing and the drivers from Windows. There are two ways to use Boot Camp after installing it, The easiest way is to reboot 'Bootcamp Windows' in 'Startup Disk'. You can easily get into Windows by clicking on it. The other way is to press 'Option' key when first booting the device, you get an option to choose between the two, which one to boot with. So if you boot the device with Windows like this, this MacBook Pro changes to a good Windows machine. The advantages of Boot Camp are that it's free and it's a pre-installed software. It is much better than the virtualization, well no, it boots the device with the Windows from the first place, you can make the use of all its performance It just becomes a Windows laptop like this. So in an actual use, you can use all the functions from Windows, the downside of it is that while Parallels could use Windows by running a program, but it needs to be rebooted to use Windows. [Unable to be used with mac at a time.] Also, in Windows unlike mac, you can see 'AMD Radeon Pro 5500' here for the graphics card. So it doesn't use the Intel on-board graphics card and it recognizes it as a dedicated graphics. Then it heats up more and shortens the battery usage time which is one of its downsides. So people who use Windows in MacBook mostly tend to connect the charging cable while using it. And one of the advantages of MacBook is that its trackpad is convenient and easy to use, but if you get into Windows, the use of the trackpad decreases into half, and the touch bar from MacBook Pro is hard to be used. Aside from those, as some say MacBook is a great Windows machine, you can use it very conveniently. And a tip for you, it was asked about a lot too, [Clamshell mode: a closed-display mode with an external monitor.] I usually use my MacBook in a clamshell mode when I use it, But if you install Boot Camp, it's hard to get into clamshell mode. Then you can go into the power options in the control panel, 'Choose what closing the lid does', and here, 'When I close the lid' then 'Do nothing'. You can use the clamshell mode if set it like this. So what I mostly recommend using Windows on a Mac is this method of using Boot Camp. Also, MacBook Pro 16in has a high-enough performance to run a game on it. Lastly, the third way is 'Windows to Go'. I actually don't really recommend this way and I don't use it that much now, however, it's the way I used when I was using a MacBook with a smaller storage. So I'm talking it about to show you that there's this type of method to use Windows exists. This can be used not only for MacBooks but for Windows too. That is! The way that you can boot Windows whenever you need by connecting a USB or a SSD with Windows in it. Right, I'll show you how it works. First, stop running Boot Camp, connect the USB, in Mac, if you press 'Option' and 'Power' when first booting the device, you can select the booting options. This is the Windows that I installed with Boot Camp, and mac, then the USB. If you go into that, you are booting your device with Windows in the USB. So it is a way called 'Windows To Go', the driver might not be properly installed since it's been quite a while that I've booted a device with it. See, the name's different from the Windows from Boot Camp, right? The storage of the USB is 128GB, and it's installed with Windows in it and we are booting this device with it. The advantages of 'Windows to Go' are that it doesn't use up the storage from the Mac, and you can use it simply by connecting a USB when you need. Of course, you can use this Windows if you connect the USB to another device. But I don't recommend this method since it has more downsides to it. That is because, the USB's connected now but the system is forced to shut down if you take it out. And the most critical thing about it is that this function is officially deleted from Windows 10 2004. So you cannot update it even though you want to. I didn't know much about it but as I studied about the license policy, one sure thing is that it was made for business purpose, that is to say, for Windows Enterprise, Even considering that, it is not officially supported for the versions of Enterprise, Pro and Home, a lot of people were using it with the third party programs. But as I used 'Windows to Go' for a long time, it heats up badly, and the system's not that high in speed, so I think it's for your reference as, 'people used this kind of method quite a lot before.' And I've been using Mac for about 7 years while doing my YouTube channel, right? There were many questions like, "Would it be suitable for me to use a MacBook?" I always answer like this, unless you need to use the programs like Final Cut or Logic that only runs on Mac, I don't highly recommend it. I've seen many people around me purchased MacBooks for its design then sold it away for it being inconvenient to use. It's a design that you don't easily get sick of, and it's got great speakers, the trackpad, and the compatibility within the Apple system The overall satisfaction itself is very high, and once you purchase it, I didn't feel like I need to change it into a new laptop for years, unless it lacks in its performance. However, the quality of Windows laptop is getting better and better, and there are so many decent series if I have to compared it to MacBook. And MacBook itself is great but it costs quite a money in the first place. So, unless you specifically need a MacBook, the usage of Windows in Korea is much more, much better and convenient for the general users I don't recommend it that much. It is more like apples and oranges. If you get used to macOS, you'd have a high satisfaction of it, if not, you'd get a really low satisfaction from it. There is no in-between at all. We have this wonderful Active X, well, it's been replaced with exe files now, even for me, I mainly use mac for the system, it's a bit hard to have mac in a 100% single use without Windows yet. So, for people who had questions of how to make use of Windows on a Mac properly, I hope you solved your questions by watching this video. Also, you can use Windows on Mac in these kind of ways, but I don't recommend using Windows as a main system on a Mac, not as a second system. That's because mac's got its own great convenient functions, but to give up on those and to only have Windows on it, it is a waste of the Mac. So, this is it for today, for this, probably, since it has Intel CPU in it, you can use Windows with it by using Parallels or Boot Camp, but the ARM Mac that is to be released will have a different architecture to it, it's expected that it'd be hard to use this methods on it. You could run it by emulating it but it'd be hard to run it as a native system. I think the demand for Intel Mac would be as steady too. Right next to the MacBook, a reliable friend lies here, Galaxy Book S.