On Oct 23, 2012, at 10:58 PM, Bradley Giesbrecht <[email protected]> wrote:
>> 
> 
> The question was pretty vague. Video editing is generally a IO and CPU 
> intensive workflow and I cannot imagine very many cases where virtualization 
> would make a video editor happy.
> 
> In my opinion if the user wants to pass up the many good native Mac video 
> editing workflows then he should go straight to bootcamp.

I agree, although the partitioning requirements are a major drawback. Get the 
size right the first time. If you have to resize later, you'll need a 3rd party 
resize utility: Winclone, Camptune, or iPartition, that explicitly knows how to 
resize JHFS+/X and NTFS, and knows how to edit hybrid MBR and GPT partition 
tables. Various message boards are littered with users who try to do this with 
Apple's tools, and end up experiencing significant data loss. And naturally the 
standard regimen people are told in this situation is: nuke the drive, 
reinstall os x, reinstall windows, restore data from backups.

So yeah virtualization is an option, with very limited performance since the VM 
3D acceleration passthrough isn't so great. And then with Bootcamp it's 
partition hell, and Apple supplies old drivers for Windows (so you're better 
off tracking them down yourself). So really you're better off just sticking 
with OS X video editing software, or getting a dedicated PC.

Chris Murphy
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