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Filed under: OS Updates, Utilities, Windows, Macintosh, Apple

Apple Boot Camp now supports Windows Vista

Boot CampApple Boot Camp version 1.2 beta is out, with some Windows Vista goodness (unless you think that's an oxymoron).

Boot camp now supports the 32-bit version of Vista, and includes a number of other updates, such as support for the Apple Remote, and updated drivers and documentation.

If you've got a previous version of boot camp installed, you don't need to uninstall it or repartition your hard drive (unless you want to resize it -- Vista's a bit on the chunky side). You will, however, need to update the Boot Camp Assistant and create a new Mac Drivers CD for installing drivers in Windows.

[via tuaw]

Filed under: Utilities, News, Windows, Macintosh, Commercial

Apple to charge $29 for Boot Camp?

Boot CampMacScoop reports that it has obtained a document suggesting Apple will release a final version of Boot Camp for Mac OS X Tiger this Spring -- and that it could cost $30.

At the same time, Apple will be launching Mac OS X Leopard, which will include Boot Camp, so if you want the option to dual boot two operating systems, you'll have dual choices: purchase a copy of Boot Camp or upgrade to Leopard.

The beta version of Boot Camp has been around since April of 2006, and should still work for free until September. The final version is expected to support Windows Vista.

This follows news that Apple will be charging users $2 to enable 802.11n support in the Apple TV, and that the company could be charging more than twice the manufacturing costs for the upcoming iPhone. But then, does anybody expect a company like Apple to make money by giving away software or selling hardware with narrow profit margins?

Filed under: News, Windows, Macintosh, Productivity, Shareware

New Parallels Desktop beta with major new features

New Parallels Desktop beta with major new featuresParallels Desktop, in my humble opinion, is a killer virtualization app that allows you to run virtually any OS, and even multiple OSes, in their own environments within Mac OS X. We've been following Parallels Desktop's development pretty closely over on TUAW, and today a new beta has been released with some rocking new features, including:
  • Booting a Boot Camp Windows XP installation, allowing you to have the best of both worlds (Boot Camp is Apple's free utility for allowing you to run Windows XP on a separate partition - not in virtualization)
  • Drag and drop files/folders between Windows and Mac OS X (previous, Parallels Desktop allowed you to set up a Shared Folder to accomplish this sharing task. This new feature, of course, is far cooler)
  • Read/Write of aforementioned Boot Camp partition
  • Parallels Transporter Beta - a new tool for migrating a Windows PC image, VMWare or Microsoft Virtual PC VM into Parallels
  • Graphics performance and improvements (though, unfortunately, no full 3D hardware acceleration support - yet)
These Parallels guys just don't quit; since they introduced this Desktop product for Mac OS X, they have consistently added killer, innovative virtualization features like this. I can't wait to see full 3D support land "in a few months." I can't find an official announcement or link at Parallels' site yet, but here is a direct link to the 33MB download. If any of you try out the new features, share your experience in the comments.

Filed under: Windows, Macintosh, Apple

New Boot Camp for Mac

apple bootcampApple released a new version of Boot Camp on Monday. The 143 MB Boot Camp is Apple's software that lets Intel Macs run Microsoft Windows. This new version adds support for Intel based Macs, with easier partitioning using presets. Apple has also built support for iSight, microphones, and USB modems into the new 1.1.2 version. I guess the most interesting and important new addition to Boot Camp is the support for track pad scrolling on Apple laptops and the use of Apple based keyboard support which includes the Delete, Print Screen, Numlock, and Scroll Lock keys.

What do you think? Is the new Boot Camp a hit? How can Apple make it better?

Filed under: Macintosh, Apple

Convert your Boot Camp partition to Parallels

Boot Camp to ParallelsMac Virtualization software Parallels allows OS X users to run multiple operating systems simultaneously, much in the same way as VMware does for Windows, and has been building a solid reputation as a good alternative to Apple's Boot Camp, which allows a Mac owner to install Windows, but requires dual-booting and a separate partition. But what if you've been Boot Camping for awhile but want to switch to Parallels? Do you have to start from scratch? As it turns out, no. Though it's certainly no walk in the park, Ars Technica's Infinite Loop blog has some info on how you can back up your Boot Camp partition and re-create it as an identical Parallels virtual machine. Not for the faint of heart, but if you're sick of dual-booting, this might be right up your alley.

Filed under: Windows, Macintosh, Apple, Microsoft

Apple's Boot Camp pwns Mac OS X

Boot CampSome users are more than a little upset that Boot Camp, the program Apple released last week to make booting Windows XP on Intel Macs, is rendering their OS X partitions inoperable. The software is, of course, intended to enable dual-booting between Windows and OS X, but some users reporting on Apple's support forums that after installing Windows they're unable to return to Apple's OS. A few users have discovered partial solutions, Apple isn't saying much about it yet, except that Boot Camp is beta at-your-own-risk software and as such is currently unsupported.

Filed under: Design, OS Updates, Utilities, Productivity, Apple, Google, Microsoft, Commercial, Shareware, Freeware, Open Source, How-Tos

Tips for Boot Campers

tips for boot camp usersSo you've put Windows XP on your Mac. What now? As someone who has to constantly switch between the two, I have a few tips. There are problems inherent in dual-booting, as opposed to running a virtual machine inside another OS (virtualization has its own issues of course). The big one for me is the issue of data storage. While I need to use USB memory sticks at work to move data from my iBook to a PC for printing, if it's a simple data sharing issue at home, this is easily remedied. I've been trying out FolderShare from Microsoft, and it works great. The OS X client is quirky, coated in brushed metal, but works like a dream. Right now it's in beta, and thus free, but expect this to change. Another alternative is a .Mac account and the XP utility for mounting your .Mac "drive." The nice thing about this is you can treat it just like a hard drive, but with all the latency issues you'd expect with a WebDAV data store... Still, there are plenty of online storage options out there.

If you want your XP to look more like a Mac, the contest winner appears to be FlyakiteOSX. Making it work like a Mac is a bit different. You know, Home is My Documents and so on, and each platform is totally different under the hood, yada yada. More important is to just understand the difference between the two and deal with it. Unfortunately, there aren't a lot of data points out there for switching from a Mac to a PC. Statistically that's just not a big pool to draw from... There's a mostly useless CNet article from 2002. And there's a much better piece from Rolf Howarth in 2004. Rolf made the switch to XP and documented the affair. Skip through the hardware issues to the software bits though. Again, it's a little out of date (XP handles wireless pretty well nowadays, in my experience)... Oh and Jeremy Zawodny switched to a PC laptop last year and appears to enjoy it. Anyway, there are lots of differences. Mostly it's a change of geography, with the need for some extra security thrown in. Instead of the menu bar up top, it's the tray down below.

If you're feeling homesick for something like Quicksilver, we've had this discussion a lot on Download Squad, plus other modifications. Choose your poison. If you want to enable Microsoft's version of Fast User Switching, you can. Downloading the Google Pack is helpful, as you get a Spotlight-esque search tool and a task switcher. Gnosis has a ton of XP resource links for you to peruse as well, which range from troubleshooting to massaging more performance out of the OS. One idea to feel at home in either OS is to use nothing but cross-platform, open source apps. It's an idea anyway.

Hey, it could be worse. Try switching from UNIX to Windows.

Filed under: Windows, Macintosh, Apple, Microsoft

Vista boots on Intel Mac

Windows Vista on Intel
MacWhat with the advent of Boot Camp, booting Windows XP on a new Intel Mac has become all but passé, but what about Windows Vista? Over at the OSx86 Project forums they're working on it, with a modicum of success. I'm not at all clear on the technical details--and I suggest you do a little more research than I have before attempting--but apparently the Vista installer tries to eliminate the OS X partition unless you remove the Mac's 200MB EFI partition before doing the install. So what's next? My vote is for OS/2 Warp.

[Via Engadget]

Filed under: Developer, OS Updates, Utilities, News, Windows, Macintosh, Apple, Microsoft, Freeware

Boot XP on Intel Macs with software from Apple

boot camp from appleI come back from a walk in the park with my son, and what do I find? Apple has released Boot Camp, a tool for installing Windows XP on Macs. Sure, someone else beat them to the punch, but this is highly unusual for two reasons. One, Apple almost never releases a public beta (at least, not for free, as in OS X). Two, this is pretty much saying, "we know you still need Windows for stuff." Either way, it's most excellent for everyone. This move has some thinking OS X might be heading to PC's everywhere, in a sort of tit-for-tat bizarro-world twist. May we live in interesting times indeed. Is it just me or is the icon they're using a little off-putting?

[Via TUAW]

Featured Time Waster

Civiballs is a beautiful, soothing physics puzzle Time Waster

CiviballsI have an absolute weakness for physics games, and while Civiballs isn't the strongest physics-based game, what it lacks in the physics department it makes up for a few times over in style and fun.

In Civiballs, you are presented with a few colored balls, and your goal is to get those balls into the same-colored urn on the level. The "civi" part of Civiballs is that there are 3 sets of levels to play, each representing a different civilization. While the civilization doesn't affect gameplay, the artwork for each level is beautifully themed to it's appropriate era.

To play the game, you are given only one tool - a sword with which to cut the chains that are holding the balls. The puzzle part of the game is in figuring out what order, and with what timing to cut each chain. Do it right, and all the right balls end up in the right urns, with no stray balls entering an urn (a no-no). Do it wrong, and you get to start over again.

Civiballs is not terribly deep on gameplay; the entire game can be completed in about 15 minutes. But if you enjoy this type of game, it will be a very enjoyable 15 minutes.

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