Apple's "Boot Camp" beta runs Windows XP on Macs

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Comments

  • Reply 141 of 510
    baygbmbaygbm Posts: 147member
    Hmm, the PowerMac G5 just took a deep dive in value. I was thinking of grabbing one at a bargain when the Mactel desktops came out (I like some of my old OS9 applications), but the prospect of being able to run Windows on a new Mactel desktop is more appealing.



    They were already stalled, but PowerMac G5 sales just fell off a cliff.
  • Reply 142 of 510
    melgrossmelgross Posts: 33,601member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by aegisdesign

    [B]$129? Surely that's the upgrade price?



    A plain copy here in the UK is about £250 retail.




    You know that if you buy an internal drive cable, or some such nonsense, you can get the Professional OEM copy for, I think it is $89. Though the price might be somewhat higher now.



    Of course, MS won't support it directly.
  • Reply 143 of 510
    climberclimber Posts: 130member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by emig647

    See my reply right above yours... would you want 2 OS's sharing a computer? That will == more complex problems... esp with malware...



    There is a reason they restricted hardware to the OS recently. I don't know if you were around but back in the pre win 2k days... and pre os x days... hardware could be directly accessed by applications... which caused a lot of lock ups. No thanks, I'll stick to mah 1 OS per machine rule =)




    Personally it doesn't really matter to me just curious what apple might be thinking to keep both sides happy if that is their big plan..we all want big better faster stronger ..Macs!
  • Reply 144 of 510
    jleonjleon Posts: 22member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by hmurchison





    We're eventually going to buy somewhat generic hardware and then we'll license whatever OS we need. Virtualization is going to expand throughout the computer encompassing even the I/O.









    Not when certain makers of an OS have a business model that revolves around selling hardware (Apple). I think if you look down the road far enough, you will see Apple become primarily a high-end hardware seller that develops certain specialty software programs that can only be run on their machines.
  • Reply 145 of 510
    flounderflounder Posts: 2,674member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by JohnnySmith

    Oh, I'm sorry. I guess it's just because I am a part of the fanboi frenzy brigade that when Jobs hinted at something big for the 30th back in January to finish off the Macworld Expo... I would think that he means that Apple is going to release something big to celebrate the 30th anniversary.



    He never hinted at anything, that's the whole point Kich was trying to make! You just whipped it up inside your pretty little noggin.
  • Reply 146 of 510
    emig647emig647 Posts: 2,455member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by baygbm

    Hmm, the PowerMac G5 just took a deep dive in value. I was thinking of grabbing one at a bargain when the Mactel desktops came out (I like some of my old OS9 applications), but the prospect of being able to run Windows on a new Mactel desktop is more appealing.



    They were already stalled, but PowerMac G5 sales just fell off a cliff.




    LOL i just sent your comment to like 5 of mah buddies that just bought new dual core g5's a few months before intel came out... LOL @ THEM =D
  • Reply 147 of 510
    kickahakickaha Posts: 8,760member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by melgross

    Read down to the bottom, and all will become clear.



    http://www.macsimumnews.com/index.ph...esistant_code/




    Ooooookay, clear as mud.



    1) The URL is kaput. Removing the crud from the middle that shows up in my address bar, I get bumped to the BootCamp article. Not seeing anything new there.



    2) The URL you *gave* looks interesting, but doesn't seem to resolve to a page on that topic.
  • Reply 148 of 510
    cdong4cdong4 Posts: 194member
    oh Apple and the funneh



    Quote:

    A printer for the instructions (You?ll want to print them before installing Windows, really.)



  • Reply 149 of 510
    chuckerchucker Posts: 5,089member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Kickaha

    Notice that the Mac side can *read* NTFS, *but not write*. All data goes Windows -> Mac.



    Yes, but you and I both know that this isn't a deliberate limitation. Microsoft refuses to give out the specs for NTFS, and Apple is using FreeBSD's NTFS implementation. Apple could, of course, ask Microsoft for a license.
  • Reply 150 of 510
    kickahakickaha Posts: 8,760member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Flounder

    He never hinted at anything, that's the whole point Kich was trying to make! You just whipped it up inside your pretty little noggin.



    Well to be fair, he did hint at *something*... he just didn't say anything about what, when, or how. IIRC, it was something like "And as you know, our 30th birthday is coming up... we might have to do something for that."



    That was it. Suddenly, it became "OMGWTFLOLBBQ! Jobs promised us {tablets, Intel PowerMacs, widescreen iPods, MacOS X 10.5} on April 1st!!!"



    *IF* they do anything, they'll pre-announce the crap out of it like they have every other announcement of note. We'll get at least one week's notice, and then we'll see what they have up their sleeve.



    Apple didn't promise squat. And that's exactly what y'all got.
  • Reply 151 of 510
    baygbmbaygbm Posts: 147member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by emig647

    LOL i just sent your comment to like 5 of mah buddies that just bought new dual core g5's a few months before intel came out... LOL @ THEM =D



    The low end G5 is $1999. The education price of the low end G5 is $1799. What would I pay for one now knowing that Windows will run a Mactel? $200-$300.
  • Reply 151 of 510
    kickahakickaha Posts: 8,760member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Chucker

    Yes, but you and I both know that this isn't a deliberate limitation. Microsoft refuses to give out the specs for NTFS, and Apple is using FreeBSD's NTFS implementation. Apple could, of course, ask Microsoft for a license.



    You're right, they could.



    So why haven't they?



    Possible reason above - no sense in doing so when you're intending it to be a migration path, not a cross-compatibility tool.
  • Reply 153 of 510
    welshdogwelshdog Posts: 1,907member
    I'm still not convinced that Adobe won't drop development of OSX apps. We just saw the report recently from one of their engineers talking about how much work it was and how hard it was (blah dee blah blah) to write the MacIntel version of Photoshop. What he really was saying was how EXPENSIVE it is to have a fully separate team of engineers writing code for a different less popular OS. Adobe is not the small Mac based company it was 15 years ago. They are a huge publicly traded company with millions of share holders that Adobe is required by law to keep happy.



    Think how much money they could save by firing the entire Mac dev team. They could take that money and make a deal with MS to include a cheap version of XP in a special "Let's Kill OSX" offer of Photoshop or Illustrator for XP. What would they have to lose? Very soon all Macs will be Intel based anyway and thus capable of running Windows.



    Very often in the real world, shareholders (unfortunately) speak louder than customers.



    Sorry, I'll stop pooping on it now.
  • Reply 154 of 510
    tenobelltenobell Posts: 7,014member
    What this tells me is that Apple is very secure that 10.5 will be better than XP or Vista. Developers and users given the choice will want to mostly use OS X.



    I think Boot Camp will be used by a certain group of Mac users who have to integrate into the Windows world or use Windows only applications.



    Most people will not buy a Mac then spend an additional $280 for Windows XP to then spend hundreds or thousands more dollars for Windows applications.
  • Reply 155 of 510
    tenobelltenobell Posts: 7,014member
    Quote:

    I'm still not convinced that Adobe won't drop development of OSX apps. They could take that money and make a deal with MS to include a cheap version of XP in a special "Let's Kill OSX" offer of Photoshop or Illustrator for XP. What would they have to lose?



    MS really isn't that much of a friend to Adobe. MS is developing tools that will compete directly with Flash and PDF. MS was developing software that would compete with Photoshop but has seemed to have dropped that project currently. But its clear that Adobe is not safe from MS.
  • Reply 156 of 510
    bergzbergz Posts: 1,045member
    Did no one else notice the significance of the name of the app? Boot Camp is the necessary evil you must suffer to go off and win the war.













    --B
  • Reply 157 of 510
    backtomacbacktomac Posts: 4,579member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by Placebo

    That's where you're wrong. Because gaming with a keyboard and mouse is better than playing Xbox titles.



    You should leave this symbol when you're joking
  • Reply 158 of 510
    james808james808 Posts: 73member
    As far as Mac gaming goes, lets be honest -- it doesn't exist. We get about two decent games a year ported over, along with an endless stream of crap and hopelessly outdated titles ("Fish Tycoon" anyone? Scheduled for release in April! I'm sure you all share my excitement over that one).



    I'd love to have OS X versions of games, but since they don't exist, I will be playing the Windows versions, and now I don't have to buy another machine to do it. Thats great, and I think it is a good move for Apple.
  • Reply 159 of 510
    insliderinslider Posts: 86member
    What about halfway between virtualization and dual booting?



    How about Apple has their own Virtual PC written into OSX that functions seamlessly like Classic (of course requiring a copy of XP)? Couldn't Apple force XP applications into using OSX windowing and open/save, etc. menus? Just thinking out loud here...
  • Reply 160 of 510
    kickahakickaha Posts: 8,760member
    Quote:

    Originally posted by james808:

    I'd love to have OS X versions of games, but since they don't exist, I will be playing the Windows versions, and now I don't have to buy another machine to do it. Thats great, and I think it is a good move for Apple.



    Indeed. Because frankly, Apple just wants to get market penetration to give people a taste of the OS, figuring that they'll migrate over on their own after they see it. Kind of a self-referential halo effect.



    And whether you are running OS X, or Windows, they *STILL* made the sale.
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