They make the point of "run windows and run the risk of getting a virus on Windows." not on the Mac.

A Windows virus isn't going to effect the Mac. Even the disk structure is different.

So if you install Windows you might want to install an anti-virus program for that Windows. That hasn't increased any potential problem on the Mac, though. At that point you have a Mac in hardware only, not software.

On Jun 5, 2006, at 6:07 AM, Dane Trethowan wrote:

well, that's the point ain't it and Apple do make the valid point that you've made, run Windows and increase your risk of being attacked so the choice is yours <smile>.

    - JD -
John Denning
AIM: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
A+ MCSA MCSE
And glad to be a Mac snob again!
Roswell, GA

My very old web site: www.jdenning.net



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