Originally posted by: halfadder
Virtual PC on PowerPC G4/G5 is only slow because it has to emulate an Intel Pentium CPU. Every single instruction has to be translated into PowerPC instructions. Hardware calls to PC hardware have to be converted to work on the Mac hardware. It's a slow process.
Now compare this to the Windows version of Virtual PC that Microsoft sells. It lets you run multiple Virtual PCs inside your own PC. Just like VMware. This runs at almost full speed because no emulation is required.
Because the new Macs use PC hardware under the hood, it's now possible to combine the two concepts. It's now possible for Microsoft to make an Intel Mac version of Virtual PC that will run fast. No emulation or translation required because the new Macs use an Intel chipset with an Intel CPU and a standard ATI X1600 GPU. They might need help from Apple, however, to bypass Mac OS X in order access the hardware directly to allow features like full DirectX acceleration. Most of Mac OS X is open source as "Darwin", so they might be able to look at the sourcecode for that information.
Originally posted by: WackyDan
Wrong... Emulation is still required, and performance is impacted. MSVPC and VMWare both create a virtual hardware layer. With very few exceptions, hardware native to the host PC isn't accessed directly, but rather through virtualized hardware within the MSVPC or VMWare app.
THe new on die virtuation engines/tech that both AMD and INtel are going to introduce will change some of that - boosting performance.
Oh.... and I'm VM Ware certified.
Originally posted by: hopejr
It's cool that apple is using the latest technology, where Microsoft is taking a whilej/k
Originally posted by: WackyDan
Heh... They didn't implement TPM until this INtel move, and even then they are not using it as intended. They haven't adopted fingerprint scanning or intergrated WAN. We'll see what their next refresh brings.
Hell, they even are making people buy external usb dial up modem dongles for $49 instead of integrating it. I travel 40+ weeks out of the year all over North America, and I still use dial up over half the time.
Originally posted by: chcarnage
Originally posted by: WackyDan
Heh... They didn't implement TPM until this INtel move, and even then they are not using it as intended. They haven't adopted fingerprint scanning or intergrated WAN. We'll see what their next refresh brings.
Hell, they even are making people buy external usb dial up modem dongles for $49 instead of integrating it. I travel 40+ weeks out of the year all over North America, and I still use dial up over half the time.
Would you like them using TPM as intended?
You're right about finger print scanning but WLAN antennas (be it with or without the WLAN card) are integrated in every mac now.
Acoustic modems are a specific demand of the North American market, acoustic modem internet access isn't that widespread in Europe anymore and some European commentators have asked themselves for a long time why so much Apple hardware comes with an internal modem. But yes, sometimes Apple doesn't hesitate to drop old interfaces. No PS/2-equivalent to support here.
Originally posted by: piasabird
Why would someone that bought a MAC want to run Windows?
