I suspect it's physical boxes. My impression is VMWare and bootcamp 
usually turn into a nice safety net or transition tool which eventually 
don't get used as comfort levels on the Mac side go up. Of course some 
might have specialty apps in Windows that don't have Mac versions but 
even then it should be a minority of usage.

In any case, more market share gets you more clout with software 
developers which should invite greater variety of apps. With a large 
enough developer base you get all the basic apps covered by somebody 
forcing new developers to come up with innovative stuff. iPhone app 
store is a good case in point. There are so many apps that they have to 
come up with the next new thing just to get noticed. Nice problem to 
have from a consumer standpoint.

CB

kaare dehard wrote:
> I wonder if the mixed environment machines also included the apple  
> ones bootcamped or otherwise running windows in a vm?
> On 2009-10-05, at 3:23 PM, Cameron wrote:
>
>   
>> That's great news!
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: [email protected]
>> [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris Blouch
>> Sent: Monday, October 05, 2009 3:07 PM
>> To: MacVisionaries
>> Subject: Apple household penetration 12%
>>
>>
>> Apparently Apple owning households has gone up from 9% to 12% in the
>> past year. Sounds like good news to me.
>>
>> http://www.npd.com/press/releases/press_091005.html
>>
>> CB
>>
>>
>>
>>     
>
>
> >
>   

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