By the way, I think there is a new version of fusion, specifically the tools that would make worthwhile to try again.
On May 4, 2008, at 5:56 AM, Scott Chesworth wrote:

Tim, quick question for you, what do you do instead of a power off in
Fusion?  I no longer use Fusion, but could easily be persuaded to have
another tinker with it

On 5/4/08, Scott Chesworth <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
just chiming in to say it is totally possible to access your mac files
from bootcamp.  The way I've done it withis with a piece of software
called MacDrive from www.mediafour.com - costs, but they run a student
discount which is handy for some.  there's probably a freeware
alternative.  You can also access your windows files from leopard if
you install your Windows on a FAT32 partition, and I believe there's
some freeware that Soren posted about a few times that will get
leopard reading ntfs partitions too.

On 5/4/08, vashaun jones <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
How did you do that and do you have to do it before you start using
the VM's My Documents folder?
On May 3, 2008, at 5:08 PM, erik burggraaf wrote:

I would also add that it's possible, even practical to share files
between your mac and your windows vm using fusion.

When I installed windows and fusion, I reset my my documents folder
under windows to the documents folder in the home folder on my mac
account. So, they are both the same folder and I have access to all
the files under either OS.  No need to copy back and forth to use
either os comfortably.

Best,

Erik
erik burggraaf

Certified Technician
Assistive Computing LTD Support and training
Sales department: 888-828-2445
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On 30-Apr-08, at 8:33 PM, Ryan Mann wrote:


Hello.  The difference between Fusion and boot camp is that if you
use Boot Camp, you would have to reboot whenever you want to use
Windows.  However, with Fusion, you can have Windows and Mac OS X
running at the same time.  If you're using Windows under Vmware
Fusion and you want to go back to Mac OS X, all you have to do is
hit the control+option+command keys together.  No, you don't have
to install Windows every time.  You just install it once as if it
was a regular machine.  I almost forgot, you don't need sighted
assistance to install Windows under Vmware Fusion because it has a
setup assistant.
Ryan

On Apr 30, 2008, at 11:16 PM, Tiffany D wrote:

What's the difference, in accessibility, between Fusion and
Bootcamp.
I know one is a virtual machine and the other really installs
windows
or whatever os you're using.  Which is better?  If I were to use
Fusion, would I literally have to install Windows every time?  I
highly doubt I could access files stored in Leopared using Fusion
because it's virtual, but I heard this is true with Bootcamp as
well.
But I've also heard of something called Parallel, which enables
you to
use both systems symultaniously and drag and drop from one to the
other.  How accessible is that?

Thanks,
Tiffanitsa













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