If you want to go with Mac Minis (which, having had to use one as my primary 
work machine for the last two weeks while my Macbook was in the shop, seems 
like a perfectly inexpensive and awesome choice), I would probably just max out 
the RAM on them and opt for putting Windows in VirtualBox (or its ilk) rather 
than worry about Bootcamp.

It would give you more options (Windows 7/8, Linux, etc.) and wouldn't require 
rebooting.

I do like the idea of more versatile public computers, although I'm not sure 
how much real use they would get beyond web browsing, in practice.  I would 
imagine that probably depends a lot on what you make available and how you 
promote them (for example, offering iMovie and making firewire cables 
available, etc.).

Also, I can't comment on what the maintenance overhead would be.  Obviously in 
the library world, there's probably a lot more acquired knowledge on imaging 
and locking down Windows than alternatives.

-Ross.

On Aug 12, 2013, at 11:57 AM, Nate Hill <nathanielh...@gmail.com> wrote:

> Is anyone on the list using mac computers and bootcamp or some other
> partition to offer public access to either a mac or windows environment for
> their users?  This seems like ti could be a pretty cool option to present
> folks with.
> 
> Any thoughts on the matter?  I'm trying to figure out what to replace our
> public computers with here in Chattanooga.  Obviously I want them to be
> both inexpensive and awesome.
> 
> -- 
> Nate Hill
> nathanielh...@gmail.com
> http://4thfloor.chattlibrary.org/
> http://www.natehill.net

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