Boot Camp passes muster in speed tests

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Despite Apple's historic disdain for Microsoft's Windows operating system, Apple's Boot Camp software lets Windows applications run just as well on a Mac as they do on a PC, performance tests confirm.

According to tests carried out by CNET product reviewers, a MacBook Pro and iMac running Intel's Core Duo processor and Windows XP delivers equal performance to similarly configured PCs designed to run Windows. On Wednesday, Apple released a beta version of Boot Camp, an application that lets Mac users run the Windows XP operating system on their Macs.

While the results may seem obvious given that the systems had similar configurations, they help answer some of the questions raised by consumers or businesses thinking about running Windows on a Mac when Apple releases a new operating system with Boot Camp integrated later this year.

Apple wants Windows users to fall in love with the Mac OS, and the best way to do that is to remove any objections to a dual-boot Mac, said Sam Bhavnani, an analyst at Current Analysis. If an Apple system running Windows wasn't as good as a comparable Windows system from another PC vendor, some people wouldn't want to take the plunge, he said.

CNET tested a notebook from Acer against a MacBook Pro. The systems had nearly identical configurations, except that the Acer notebook used slightly slower memory — DDR2 memory running at 533MHz to the MacBook's DDR2 667MHz. Performance was nearly identical for several popular applications or tasks, such as Photoshop, iTunes and DivX encoding. Similar results were recorded when an iMac running Boot Camp was tested against Dell and HP desktops.

One area where the Windows Mac suffered compared with the Acer system was on tests with Doom 3. However, the ATI graphics chip used by the Acer system had more memory dedicated to graphics than the one used by the Mac.

Game players are one group of customers thought to be interested in dual-boot Macs, because they tend to like Apple's hardware, but get frustrated by the release of hot games for Windows long before a Mac version is created.

Talkback

"Game players are one group of customers thought to be interested in dual-boot Macs, because they tend to like Apple's hardware" ... Are you F$$$ing nuts! That has to be the most stupid comment I have ever seen... LOL.

via Facebook 10 April, 2006 16:21
Reply

Apple's strategy for enticing reluctant Windows users shouldn't come as too much of a surprise to anyone who's been observing Apple's moves since their original; announcement of a switch to Intel processors.

I predicted as much back in November (http://badcomedown.blogspot.com/2005/11/is-apple-preparing-honeypot.html), when it became obvious that Apple's strategy was going to change from one of denial (Windows on Mac will never happen) to one of seemingly relaxed acceptance (Windows? We don't mind at all.). Not even I however would have expected them to actually release something like BootCamp... Just goes to show that, in some ways, Apple always has an ace up its sleeve.

via Facebook 11 April, 2006 11:13
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