that USB device from the host Mac environment in to the virtualised Windows environment. The FaceTime camera is a USB device, in theory this means you can use Parallels Desktop or VMware Fusion to run Windows and 'share' the camera i.e. I use a Mac mini for Boot Camp so it does not have such a camera and hence I cannot check this. As part of this it should also have installed Apple Software Update in to your Windows so it can check for updates. However I would check and make sure you have the current Boot Camp drivers from Apple installed first. Note: The original built-in camera was referred to as an iSight camera but was then referred to as a 'FaceTime' camera and is now referred to as a 'FaceTime HD' camera.Īn updated FaceTime camera driver for Windows is available here - FaceTime Camera Driver Update If so then I believe normally this driver should be installed as part of the Apple Boot Camp driver pack. I now have a temporary work laptop, a newer Macbook Pro MacBook Pro (13-inch, 2018, Four.
Macbook Pro will not detect Apple Cinema Display I have an Apple Cinema Display that I had connected to my personal laptop (Macbook Pro). If you are referring to the built-in camera on a MacBook Pro then this implies you are running Windows via Boot Camp. Model Name: Mac mini Model Identifier: Macmini9,1 Chip: Apple M1 System Firmware Version: 7429.41.5.