Apple to Charge for Boot Camp? 501
An anonymous reader writes "According to a report MacScoop has obtained, Apple will charge current users of Mac OS X Tiger for the final version of Boot Camp that will be released at the same time as Mac OS X Leopard, this Spring."
Uh.... (Score:4, Insightful)
"will be sold for $29 to Tiger users" (Score:5, Interesting)
There are now great alternatives. Boot Camp, Parallels, CrossOverMac, Wine. Competition is great (even if cooperation is better
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The question is can all users upgrade to Leopard? They may not meet the higher hardware requirements, or may depend on applications that aren't yet supported under Leopard.
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GAAP made them do it. (Score:2, Funny)
The reason given will no doubt be (Score:3, Informative)
No... (Score:2)
Just like iChat (Score:5, Informative)
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its called iLife.
Yeah and you expected? (Score:5, Informative)
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Seriously, you're trolling. MANY hardcore Mac users prefer Firefox over Safari. Get over it and stop pigeonholing people because of their choice of browser.
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Dual Booting? (Score:3, Funny)
Nobody even turns off their macs anymore, much less boots into a different OS.
Not til they fix it... (Score:2, Interesting)
Back to Bootcamp... it took almost a solid year for them to release a build of the Windows drivers that actually made use of all of the system's hardware... until then, the two-finger trackpad drag didn't work (and it's st
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Re:Not til they fix it... (Score:5, Informative)
What is the difference between Boot Camp and GRUB? (Score:3, Interesting)
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Re:What is the difference between Boot Camp and GR (Score:3, Informative)
What Boot Camp does is it provides BIOS emulation so NTLDR, GRUB, and LILO then work unmodified after the Boot Camp loader has already run. The Boot Camp assistant also provides a non-destructive GUI partitioning too
Re:What is the difference between Boot Camp and GR (Score:5, Informative)
For those only having a few Win32 applications... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For those only having a few Win32 applications. (Score:4, Informative)
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Killing yet ANOTHER Golden Goose? (Score:2)
Bootcamp is good leverage. The parallels thing might be even better. In either case, it's a good way to bridge from Windows to MacOS and they want to make it less appealing to do so???
Idiots. They over-estimate their value.
Re:Killing yet ANOTHER Golden Goose? (Score:4, Insightful)
Dont need it: We need only the BIOS emulation (Score:2, Interesting)
1) It provides a GUI (not very good and limited, it does not support linux) for resizing the patritions. The actual job is done by DiskUtil, which can be used without installing BootCamp.
2) It contains a disk image with Apple Win32 drivers (you can extract the image from the BootCamp installer - just search in the package and you'll find the image somewhere - i remember waguely it is in a
parallels (Score:4, Insightful)
I need Windows for my job, and I refuse to reboot my macbook twice a day into XP and back. I had tried Parallels but was entirely unsatisfied with its performance until I upgraded to 1.25 gigs of RAM. Sweet Jeebus is it cool. Booting XP in a window takes about fifteen seconds from launch to login, automatically recognizes my hardware setup and network connection and does exactly what I need it to while staying the hell out of my way.
BootCamp looks neat, I guess, but really - who the hell restarts their computers anymore?
Re:parallels (Score:5, Interesting)
MadCow.
The weird and wonderful world of the machead (Score:4, Funny)
More revenue for Apple. More profits for Apple. More Macs for us to buy. Yea!"
This is a comment on the site. Most illuminating, people who do not know the difference between their own interests and that of other people.
Hardly know where to begin....
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:4, Interesting)
But really, I see this as a good thing. If they are going to release it as a full retail release with documentation and actual support, then by all means put a price tag on it. It will only take one half hour phone call to support to burn through the $30 retail price, and in the scope of things the price vs additional functionality you will get from a Mac is a mind bending proposition.
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Bleagh (Score:3, Insightful)
Hmm. Well, I'm not sure what benefits, if any, bootcamp (free or at $30) offers over Parallels at $60; while I am quite certain of a very long (and quite relevant to me) list of advantages Parallels has over bootcamp.
So I guess this is about as much news as changes to Safari — because I don't use that either. Once I tried Omniweb, I basically never had a reason to go back. It kicks Safari's butt right off the face of the
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think of it like a free preview of an upcoming feature in a future version of the OS. It would be the same
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Insightful)
Just pointing out the massive hypocrisy here, and I'll probably get modded down for it by rabid fanboys, but I can't ignore the massive hypocrisy here.
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing to see here.
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:4, Informative)
Mind you, I still think it's a lame cash grab, but I figure that Leopard will include the full version at no extra cost so it won't affect future switchers anyways. When I tested out the current beta version, it worked fine, other than the fact that Parallels was much more useful and it meant having a Windows installation on my MBP. In either case, I needed the hard drive space back. I wonder if they'll put this down to the S-O Act too...
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:4, Informative)
They're working on that [enbug.org].
FIPS shortens FAT32 partitions. Linux had it in 1999.
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Informative)
# FIPS
# GNU Parted
# Partition Magic (bought out by Symantec and discontinued)
# Paragon Partition Manager
# Acronis Disk Director Suite
Some of these have been out for quite a long time.
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Ubuntu's installer can resize NTFS and FAT partitions nondestructively, though don't try it on a Vista system as the version of NTFSResize that Ubuntu ships with renders Windows unbootable (though it can be fixed using a newer version of NTFSResize, and 7.04 will almost certainly work fine).
Vista's disk management can resize NTFS partitions
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Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Insightful)
Ok let me know when you have it working and will support customers using it? Surely something less expensive then $29 would win the market
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Insightful)
Apple.
As is demonstrated by the fact they used PowerPC chips for years, with nary a thought for people wanting to boot windows.
Just my $0.02
Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Insightful)
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But as I said I do not care too much as the main use of OS X is firmware updates, I boot straight into Linux normally.
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$50/year for updates when you have to (and will) shell out $130 for your update box?
Dude, Apple's in for they money, why would they offer you a service that would yield them $80 less per year per Mac user?
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Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Funny)
A street-corner hooker is significantly cheaper than a high-class escort.
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Hmm, mod me insightful if you find a deep meaningful analogy to the OS debate, hidden in the above. I personally could not, but of course I posted anyway.
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Re:Looks like I'll stay with Tiger then (Score:5, Interesting)
Just to make something clear that is not so clear in the summary: Boot Camp is included with Leopard, it is free with Leopard. It is BETA on Tiger, and if you wish to use the supported final Boot Camp on Tiger after Leopard is released, you will have to pay.
This is an inducement to upgrade. If they let you just keep BootCamp for free, without wrapping it up in something else you paid for, then the SOX fairy would surely turn them into a pumpkin.
I hope every lobbyist is working overtime to fix this damn GAAP rule. It makes sense on paper, but the implementation is "Retarded".
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Microsoft should have to charge for IE 7. (Score:2)
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Errm... no. Did you miss the "this is an add-on to Microsoft Windows XP, you have no right to use it except on a properly licensed copy of XP" clause in the license? Not to mention the use of WGA to stop anyone from
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There is no extra speed merely from switching from 32 to 64 bits, in general. However, on the AMD64 (aka EM64T in Intel-speak) architecture in particular, switching to the native mode of the processor (which happens to be 64-bit) also enables a bunch of extra registers -- and that does speed things up.
Re:Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
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Yes way. (Score:2, Informative)
Re:No way. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:No way. (Score:4, Informative)
Apple doesn't care, full Bootcamp will be part of Leopard (for "free"), this is just a boon to the few users who don't want to get Leopard but want a non-beta bootcamp in the end.
They already did it with iChat AV (OSX 10.3 included iChat AV, you had to pay $29 to get it on 10.2) and with the 802.11n update (will be available with the 802.11n Airport, should be included in Leopard, $29 if you stick to Tiger without getting the 802.11n Airport Extreme)
Most people will buy Leopard anyway.
Re:No way. (Score:4, Informative)
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Also, Parallels and Boot Camp target slightly different users. Right now, I would use Boot Camp because it gives full access to the hardware (read: accelerated 3D graphics). I know that Parallels stated that they'd be releasing a version of their virtualizer that provides accelerated 3D, but I'll believe that when
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Define Vista then... (Score:3, Insightful)
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In the past MS have had a habit of dressing up releases (well consumer ones) as new releases, for example Win95->Win98->WinME - but they didn't do this for business systems. I think they released 6 free service packs for NT, 4 for Windows 2000 and 2 (so far) for XP.
As MS have combined the home and office flavours of OS into a single code base, I see no reason for them not to carry on as they have with XP. You buy the OS and the Service Packs/Point releases are free. Vista is
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Also, Panther came in October 2003, and Tiger came out in April 2005. That's 1.5 years, not two. And Leopard, which is coming
Re:Define Vista then... (Score:5, Informative)
Apple isn't restricting what you can do with 10.2 or 10.3, the problem is that each new release has included a major new api or toolkit (CoreData comes to mind in 10.4). If developers take advantage of the new features then their apps won't run on previous versions.
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That's why it's called an "upgrade." They sell software for money -- the act of exchanging a completed software package and support in exchange for monetary remuneration is actually quite common ;).
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Re:Define Vista then... (Score:5, Insightful)
Please, can someone explain why it is so damn hard for some people to look past the version numbers and just check out what's new and improved in OS X releases??
Re:Define Vista then... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Define Vista then... (Score:4, Funny)
'Cuz, you see, on Windows, it's easier: Every new version is a real new version. A whole number, not some wimpy little decimated digit to the RIGHT of the decimal point. That's why Windows is always TEN TIMES better than the Mac. You don't see us Windows users trying to boot OS X on our computers do you? You guys are just lusers.
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Re:Same shit different day (Score:5, Informative)
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I was unaware that 3*$129=$750.
Re:Apple milking its users? I'm shocked! (Score:5, Insightful)
Right, because the millions of dollars a month they spend on developing OSX should be coming out of the kindness of their hearts.
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If they want to charge the extra few bucks upfont that is one thing, but i agree all this garbage with 'fringe costs' is really annoying.
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What's the fuss about? What's wrong with you Apple-hating malcontents?
I dunno... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Apple milking its users? I'm shocked! (Score:5, Insightful)
If all you want from QuickTime is full screen, go here [macworld.com]. I'm not sure where you're getting $10 from, because QuickTime Pro is $30, and that gets you a lot more than just the ability to play movies full screen.
They charge $130 for incremental OS updates every 12-18 months, which is basically a subscription service.
Wrong. Truly spoken like somebody who doesn't actually know what they're talking about! Don't be fooled by what looks like a change in the minor version number; what you think are "incremental" updates always have a large amount of new features -- it's closer to uprading from Windows 2000 to Windows XP than applying a service pack. Besides, if you don't want the new features, it's not like the older versions of OS X stop working, and they still provide security updates for them.
They're charging $2 to enable the 802.11n hardware that they will ship.
For legal reasons. The Sarbanes-Oxley Act really is that stupid.
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/. knocking commercial software? I'm shocked! (Score:5, Insightful)
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10.4 -> 10.5 - ~24 months
10.3 -> 10.4 - ~18 months
10.2 -> 10.3 - ~14 months
10.1 -> 10.2 - ~11 months
Notice a trend?
Apple made major releases Mac OS X available relatively often to get newly implemented features out to end customers and developers sooner (a good thing)
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Their OS releases are not 'updates', they bring significant new functionality while evolving an already great code base. They only APPEAR to be 'incremental' because of their versioning scheme, but each release packs in more upgrade than any corresponding major version upgrade of windows.
And you have to also bear in mind that Apple's target demographic doesn't give a crap about a few bucks here
Re:Apple milking its users? I'm shocked! (Score:4, Informative)
You completely missed my point. I'm NOT buying their products because "I want to give my money to the good guys" or any such philosophical or idealistic bullshit.
I buy their products because at the end of the day, they just work. It's not just a marketing slogan. I can sit and relax on my couch and not fight with my computer.
That's all it is. I don't care about their philosophy, or revolutionary upgrades. I just want a computer that does what I want, when I want, without irritating me.
All I care about is the quality. And I'm willing to pay for it. And people like me are Apple's target demographic. That was my point.
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Both Apple and Parallels efforts to allow both products to co-exist and even work together in some fashion is what put the steam back into Apple's BootCamp efforts. Without it, for a brief