My only caution to this approach is if something goes horribly awry in your 
Bootcamp installation, it's a wipe and reinstall in your future, just like with 
an actual Windows machine. Also the amount of disk space your Windows partition 
takes out of your Mac hard drive is fixed. 

Parallels however has a dynamically expanding disk image, so you can claim 120 
gigs, but if Windows only really takes up 15 gigs, that is all the hard drive 
space it will use on the Mac. And back to my original point, you can install 
everything you need in your Windows OS, update everything, get it all set up 
just the way you want it, then quit Parallels and backup the image file, so 
that a complete system and software restore is a matter of deleting the bad 
image, copying the backup and renaming it what the original was. 15 minutes and 
you are back in business. They also have a drive image snapshot feature which 
you can configure as you please. And if you are sharing your Mac folders with 
Windows there is no loss of data. 

And Sarah, let me express my utter horror that you let your kids play games on 
your development computer. I trust that any woman brilliant enough to develop 
software, has not provided an Administrator account in either OS to the little 
gremlins? 

Bob


On Apr 27, 2010, at 3:54 PM, Sarah Reichelt wrote:

> My kids use BootCamp because they want to be able to play all the modern 
> games.
> I use Sun's Virtual Box which is free, but doesn't have the
> performance of BootCamp. But I can switch to it without rebooting and
> it runs Rev fine.

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