Most Popular Articles
- Prune Your Time Machine Backups Selectively (01 May 2008)
- Reluctantly Switching from Eudora to Apple Mail (13 Apr 2008)
- Hand Coding HTML Is Still in Vogue (25 Apr 2008)
- Iridium-Capable iPhone Not Entirely Laughable (13 Apr 2008)
Recent TidBITS Talk Discussions
- OmniFocus: the interface is weak but the project is willing (11 messages)
- Anyone tried the Online Passport application system? (20 messages)
- Phone Message Software Recommendation please (8 messages)
- auto-filing of read mail in Apple Mail (7 messages)
Shopping for a new digital camera? In "Take Control of Buying a Digital Camera," pro photographer Larry Chen helps you pick out the right camera and accessories for your needs and budget. This book is loaded with tips on using your camera, pointers to the best review sites, and more!
Related Articles
- Boot Camp and Tiger: One Last Warning (09 Dec 07)
- Mac Market Share Rising at Cornell University (13 Sep 07)
Boot Camp Beta on the Chopping Block
One of the big factors in Apple's recent market share gains is the company's successful transition to an Intel architecture, which among other benefits allows Mac owners to run Windows and Windows-centric applications. The company has actively pushed that capability among potential switchers, offering a free public beta of the Boot Camp software, coming in Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard, that will let users install and run Windows directly on their Intel Macs' hard drives.
Apple has hardly hidden the fact that the Boot Camp beta license agreement entitles Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger users to use the Boot Camp beta only until Leopard becomes publicly available this month. But I suspect a lot of users who don't read the fine print are unaware that their right to use Windows on their Macs is about to expire unless they pay for the upgrade to Leopard.
Clearly, buying and installing Leopard, including the upgrade to the latest Boot Camp drivers, will take care of the problem. But just as earlier versions of Boot Camp stopped working earlier this year, it's not unlikely that Apple has an expiration date hard-wired into beta 1.4, the current version of Boot Camp, that will cause it to stop working not long after Leopard is available to the public. At the very least, Boot Camp Assistant will doubtless no longer allow users to partition hard drives and configure them for use with Windows. Will pre-existing Windows installations based on the Boot Camp public beta stop working entirely, perhaps later this year? We just don't know.
If so, users who want a stop-gap solution before they can get around to upgrading to Leopard (either because their copy hasn't reached them yet, or because they're reluctant to be a 10.5.0 early adopter) should be able to access a Boot Camp-enabled installation of Windows using even a free demo download version of Parallels Desktop. This $80 virtualization software for Intel Macs initially worked only with proprietary disk image formats holding a Windows installation, but more recent versions support Windows partitions created with Boot Camp Assistant.
VMware Fusion. The most seamless way to run Windows on your Mac.Backed by nearly a decade of proven virtualization technology.
Try VMware Fusion today for free, or order online for only $79.
Visit: <http://www.tidbits.com/about/support/vmware-fusion.html>
Bookmark at: del.icio.us | digg | reddit | Slashdot


