Windows on Mac

MotionMan

Lifer
Jan 11, 2006
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I just got three "new" Macs to replace all but one of my family's PCs. Two of the Macs have the Intel chip (laptops) and I will have to be able to run Windows on them.

Last night, a friend of mine (a Mac guy) said there are a few different ways to implement Windows on a Mac:

1. Boot Camp: Boot entirely into Windows (no Mac OS running);
2a. Parallels (or something similar): Boot in MacOS and run Windows "in" Mac as full screen.
2b. Parallels (or something similar): Boot in MacOS and run Windows "in" Mac as a window.
3. windows of Windows in Mac: In MacOS, open certain Windows windows on top of the Mac OS (So you can have windows of Windows and windows of MacOS open and visible at the same time.

I had heard of 1 and 2, but never heard of 3. How does that work?

Do any of these options require a separate hard drive partition for Windows?

Also, he said that, on my Mac laptop, I can have the MacOS running on my laptop screen and Windows on an external screen. Is that true? Is that implementation 2a/b or 3?

Sorry if these are simple questions. The last time I owned a Mac I think it ran OS 7.

MotionMan
 

Nothinman

Elite Member
Sep 14, 2001
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3. windows of Windows in Mac: In MacOS, open certain Windows windows on top of the Mac OS (So you can have windows of Windows and windows of MacOS open and visible at the same time.

I can't remember what Parallels calls that but in VMware I think that's Fusion. The apps still run in a VM but they look like semi-normal windows to you in the host OS.

Do any of these options require a separate hard drive partition for Windows?

BootCamp obviously will since you're installing Windows on the bare hardware. The other options all run Windows in a VM so you just need a VM disk file.
 

magnux

Platinum Member
Sep 12, 2002
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Originally posted by: Nothinman
I can't remember what Parallels calls that but in VMware I think that's Fusion. The apps still run in a VM but they look like semi-normal windows to you in the host OS.

VMWare *is* Fusion, the method of seamlessly integrating Windows windows (hah) into OS X (via VMWare Fusion) is called "Unity".

 

rdp6

Senior member
May 14, 2007
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I think this is called Coherence mode in Parallels. When I ran a windows vm frequently I put the OS X dock on the side and the windows taskbar on the bottom and worked in Coherence on occasion. Mostly I would use windows in full-screen mode and flip to OS X using Spaces.
 

Kmax82

Diamond Member
Feb 23, 2002
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www.kennonbickhart.com
Yea, there are trials for both solutions, and there is also VirtualBox, which is free, depending on how much work you actually do in Windows.

I personally like VMWare Fusion the most, but I haven't tried VirtualBox. Also, you can use a BootCamp partition and boot that in VMWare or Parallels, but I find that is MUCH slower.
 

DanK414

Senior member
Oct 21, 2002
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I use VMWare Fusion on mind. Works perfectly as full screen or windowed. Only thing is it's buggy when I run some games on it.
 

TheStu

Moderator<br>Mobile Devices & Gadgets
Moderator
Sep 15, 2004
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VMWare Fusion all the way. The free/discounted upgrades from one version to the next are nice.