UsMan's WoRkSpAce

Thursday, June 22, 2006

Tiger and Windows XP on Apple machine

Apple Boot Camp software is used for dual-booting Windows XP (SP2) and Mac OS X (Tiger) on a Mac computer. Boot Camp is currently a beta software with no support. However it will be part of Apple 2007 Leopard OS. It is not an emulation software, so the windows OS views the actual hardware and performs as on a normal PC. Switching between the two OS can be done via Windows control panel and Mac System Preferences. Both tools also allows choosing a default OS. Alt key at boot time allows run-time choice between the two OS. Bootcamp creates a windows driver CD to enable XP support.

Mac OS supports read/write access to FAT32 partitions but only read access to NTFS.

A product MacDrive can be used to allow read/write access to Mac-formatted disc from Windows XP. It serves to share data between the two OS.

A freeware application 'Input Remapper' can be used to support right mouse clicking, Page Up/Down, Home/End, Volume and brightness keys and Print screen button.

Mac and Windows interpret system clock differently. Therefore it is advisable to sync time from a time source using NTP. 'Time Synchronizer' from Softnik allows automatic syncing of time.

Apple iLife suite includes iMovie, iPhoto, iDVD and iTunes music player.

Microsoft outlook on Windows and Microsoft Entourage can be used. Both work with Exchange server and other common messaging protocols.

Google's Browser Sync extension for Mozilla's Firefox synchronizes bookmarks and settings, including cookies and saved passwords. Firefox is available for both Windows and Mac OS.

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