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MacBook Pro Battery Exchange
I think I was actually vaguely aware of the 15-inch MacBook Pro Battery Exchange Program, but *I* wasn't having any battery problems so I never looked into it. I should have, and if you own an affected model, you should get your battery exchanged. You may not be having problems (I saw no problems until this week) but chances are that you will.
New MacBook Hits The Street So Apple released the specs for the new MacBooks today...
The Psyche Of PC Owners Apparently I'm not the only one wondering if Microsoft is going to take a big belly flop with Vista: David Morgenstern at eWeek has a column asking "What if Microsoft Held a Vista Party and Nobody Came?".
Previous to that, the Gartner Group suggested that the big dive itself might be further postponed.
Get Your Mac On With Google The days of the Mac OS being a forgotten platform by Google's developers have been dwindling, and the company has taken a couple of new steps toward being more inclusive of Mac users. It looks like Google finally noticed that making the world's information universally accessible wasn't really universal if it ignores a certain percentage of the marketplace. That would be...
Mac OS X Internals Review I've been waiting quite a while for this book. It was the introduction of the Intel Macs that delayed this; an appendix and numerous updates throughout the book cover the new hardware and the software changes (that's the August 2006 printing; if you are buying used and want the Intel info, don't buy the June 2006 edition). This is quite a book. It covers everything from...
Macs Can Chat Better Thanks To Microsoft Microsoft released its newest chat client, Messenger 6.0, for the Macintosh platform in Universal Binary form. Version 6.0 of the Microsoft Messenger for Mac works for Mac OS 10.3 or later, according to its website. The Universal Binary will permit it to work on PowerPC and Intel-based processors.
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12.04.06
When The OS Doesn't Matter
By
Mathew Ingram
What happens when the operating system you use doesn't really matter any more?
It started with dual-booting Windows and Linux, and using things like Crossover Office to run Windows apps under Linux (which is balky at best), and then things like Virtual PC for Mac, and now we have Apples with Intel chips that can dual-boot Windows and Mac OS-X with Boot Camp. But dual-booting is a pain, because you have to close everything and restart your computer.
Virtualization is where it's at - running two operating systems side-by-side, so you can flip back and forth. I've never used it, but Parallels looks like a truly amazing experience. Windows XP and Mac OS-X running right next to each other, and the latest upgrade allows you to move Windows apps outside the Parallels window and drag and copy things from one OS to the other. Very cool. Michael Verdi has a screencast here.
There has been talk that Apple would include some form of virtualization in Leopard, the next upgrade to the Mac OS, but Apple executives recently quashed that speculation, saying the company is happy with Boot Camp and that Parallels involves "performance degradation." By which they mean it causes your system to run a lot slower. Some Parallels users have said the same, but others have said for most normal computing tasks it runs fine (in other words, no video games or other graphics-hogging apps).
If you can run Mac OS and Windows on the same machine and use whichever program you want, and drag data back and forth at will between the two, what does an operating system mean? In a sense, it just becomes a visual preference rather than a system or standards choice. And if you spend most of your time using Web apps, the operating system means even less. We're not quite there yet, of course, but would such a world help Apple or Windows more?
About the Author: Mathew Ingram [note only one "t" in Mathew] is a
technology writer and blogger for the Globe and Mail, a national
newspaper based in Toronto, and also writes about the Web and media at
www.mathewingram.com/work and www.mathewingram.com/media. |