Apple's Boot Camp 6 actually supports the competing product -- as long as you're in a virtual environment.
Apple has just released Boot Camp 6, meaning users will now be able to run Windows 10 on their Macs within the virtual environment.
The new version of its Boot Camp software allows the installation of the 64-bit version of Windows 10, as long as the user has a Mac that can run the Yosemite version of the OS X, according to an InformationWeek report.
Boot Camp will allow you to do plenty of interesting things on your computer, including running both Mac OS X and Windows on separate partitions on the same computer, allowing you to choose which OS you want when you load the computer. You can either share documents between the two.
Boot Camp 6 supports Macs from 2012 and newer, although you may still be able to install Windows 10 on older Macs — something that Apple makes no guarantees for, although it does promise it will work on all MacBooks and Mac Minis.
As always, the Boot Camp software will also support older versions of Windows, like Windows 8 and 8.1, although its support of Windows 7 ended earlier this year.
For those who have older activated Windows software and want to upgrade from that, you will need to run Apple Software Update in that version of Windows before the installation is finished to ensure that those new drivers will be there.
If you don’t have Boot Camp, there are other ways to get Windows 10 onto your Mac. You can check out virtual machine applications that are designed for the mac that are capable of running the platform. These applications will set up a partition on the hard disk of your mac that can allow another OS to run. If you don’t want to have to reboot in order to run Windows, you can get a commercial VM app that will generally cost you about $100 to buy, with an evaluation period if you want to try it out first.