thanks Scott, I'll look into Bootcamp then
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Scott Chesworth" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, July 22, 2009 11:48 AM
Subject: Re: Virtualizing on MacBook Pro


>
> Hi James,
>
> Virtualising does the job for most things, although once the novelty
> wore off I started to find the slight lag in performance irritating.
> If I was doing something where I needed both OS's to be available to
> use simultaneously I used to split the ram right down the middle.  For
> more intensive tasks in Windows where you're not also relying on
> Leopard being smooth to use I'd assign 1.5gb to Windows for the
> duration of what needed to be done.
>
> In the end however, I install boot camp and tend to use that for any
> remaining Windows stuff I need to do purely because the performance
> hit virtualisation had and the slightly better driver support in boot
> camp won me over.  For me, most of what I'm in Windows for now is
> music/audio creation and editing, some fairly intensive stuff for any
> computer, so your mileage may vary.
>
> hth
> Scott
>
> On 7/22/09, James & Nash <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> Hi everyone,
>>
>> This is a question for those on the list who use their MBps to run 
>> Windows.
>> When I get my new Mac, I will need to run Windows for my new potential 
>> job.
>> How does the 2GB of RAM do the job and how much of the GD do you 
>> generally
>> give up to the virtualization software?
>>
>> Thanks
>>
>> James
>>
>>
>> >
>>
>
> > 


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