Embrace of Windows buffs up Mac's appeal for IT

07.04.2006

Now students and faculty members can choose 'the best tools for their specific needs,' Halamka said. Users who have tried the beta release of Boot Camp have reported that it makes Windows XP applications run 'blazingly fast' on a Mac, he said.

Not everyone is sold on Boot Camp, though.

'It's not as neat and clean as it might sound,' said Roger Kay, an analyst at Endpoint Technologies Associates Inc. in Wayland, Mass. 'They've filled a hole here, but it's more of an experimental thing. I don't think it'll change the game that much.'

Depending on how users format Windows XP on their Macs, they may or may not be able to read and write data between the Windows and Mac OS X partitions, Kay said. And businesses still have to buy a Windows XP license from Microsoft for each system that Boot Camp runs on, he noted.

'The proof of the pudding will be to see how good it really is -- how stable and supportable, and how scalable,' said Alastair Behenna, CIO at Harvey Nash PLC, a London-based workforce recruiting and IT services firm.