On Apr 18, 2007, at 3:01 PM, Michael Chan wrote:

> On Wed, 2007-04-18 at 22:22 +0100, Bob W wrote:
>> The children of one of my friends want a laptop, and more  
>> particularly
>> they want a MacBook. My friend knows nothing about computers, but she
>> needs to be able to run Windows software for a course she'll be  
>> taking
>> later this year.
>>
>> What extras are required to be able to run Windows software on a Mac,
>> and what is the performance of Windows software like when run this
>> way?
>
> There are three options to run Windows on an Intel-based Mac.  Each
> option requires a valid Windows 2000/XP/Vista install disk and license
> which is a separate purchase from the software listed below.
>
> 1) BootCamp http://www.apple.com/macosx/bootcamp/
>
> 2) Parallels www.parallels.com
>
> 3) VMWare Fusion http://www.vmware.com/products/beta/fusion/
>
> Bootcamp boots straight into windows or into OSX from cold start.
> Parallels/VMWare run Windows in a virtual machine within OSX.
> Performance does not take too much of a hit when virtualized; in  
> any of
> the options it's mostly based on the hardware in the MacBook and  
> will be
> comparable to a non-Apple hardware macine of similar  
> specifications, but
> you will want to have a lot of memory in any case; 1 Gig at least; 2
> Gigs would be better.
>
> Apple currently doesn't charge for BootCamp.  Parallels costs money.
> VMWare currently doesn't charge for Fusion but probably will once it
> comes out of beta.
>
> I've seen all three in action.  Parallels is my favorite solution
> currently.

Michael covered all the options.

Several of my clients bought MacBooks specifically so they could work  
in both Mac OS X and Windows as a part of their business needs.  
Parallels worked best for them when they needed simultaneous access  
to both environments, Boot Camp proves to give the best performance  
(better screen/graphics adaption) and is more compatible with some  
Windows devices and applications.

I have no experience with VMWare Fusion.

Godfrey

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