I dual boot into Windows 10 on occassion. But if I had "above4g" enabled in the BIOS, then Windows 10 wouldn't boot. So I need npci=0x2000 in boot args in order to boot into MacOS.
There are several tutorials about mapping your usb ports, but they're all written from the perspective of developers, so its a bit difficult to comprehend for laymen. The ones from this link, are the best ones I've seen, but still a challenge for me to grasp.
Oh, one more thing.
On wifi, my antennas originally were on the back of my pc case, it had terrible reception. So my wifi signal kept dropping. Perhaps this is why you can't connect to your wifi. My solution was to get rp-sma extension cables to move my antennas up a little higher. No...
Here are pics of my custom adapter.
The middle pic is the actual adapter. It is basically just 4 wires soldered to a Micro USB breakout board, an example of which is the 3rd pic. Then I just plug that adapter into a micro usb cable, which in turn is plugged into a USB 3 port on my...
WIFI for me worked out of the box, nothing special needed. But bluetooth needed a little janky fix because I don't have USB 2 working on my motherboard.
On my wifi adapter, there is connector which you normally plug directly to an internal USB 2 connector. This is needed to get bluetooth...
I think if you assign a label to the partition within Linux, that should solve your issue. As you probably know, in Linux there are several ways to accomplish this task. You could do it via the command line or via a GUI app like Gparted. Assigning a label to a linux partition is essentially...
MacOS Catalina thinks my internal M.2 NVMe SSD is an external drive. I found a solution that worked for me at this link on Reddit.
Essentially, you use Hackintool to find the device path of the storage device. In my case, the device path is: PciRoot(0x0)/Pci(0x1,0x1)/Pci(0x0,0x0)
From there...
Got my system up and running today using OC 0.5.8 Debug and MacOS 10.15.5. My hardware is listed below in my Signature.
My install was pretty straight forward, following the Opencore Desktop Guide. The Install USB booted up perfectly on the first try. Installation of MacOS went smoothly; also...
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