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Windows Vista and Boot Camp 1.2 Review

Being able to dual boot an Intel Mac into either OS X or Windows Vista gives Mac users the best (and worst) of both worlds. So what’s it like to run Windows Vista on a Mac via Boot Camp? Our in-depth Windows Vista review explains all…

Tue, 10 Apr 2007 ↓
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£99 inc VAT
Windows Vista and Boot Camp 1.2 Review
Desktop OSs 0

Parallels Desktop 4.0 review

If you'd like to run games for Windows on your Intel Mac, you'll either need to use Boot Camp and restart your computer; or make use of a solution such as Parallels Desktop which allows you to run games within your desktop. We take a look.

Mon, 22 Dec 2008 ↓
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£48.89 or £31.27 to upgrade from version 3.0
Parallels Desktop 4.0 review
Software 4

Parallels Desktop

Apple’s Boot Camp program allows Intel Macs to boot directly into Windows XP (Pro or Home versions) and run it natively, with full support for accelerated graphics and hardware devices (other than the built-in iSight camera, that is). But rebooting is time-consuming, and Mac users would much rather stay in Mac OS X and just run Windows when needed. Plus, Boot Camp only supports Windows XP.

Wed, 16 Aug 2006 ↓
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$79.99 (£43)
Parallels Desktop
Desktop OSs 0

Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard Review

It's taken two years to arrive, but Leopard is finally here. We set the Macworld team to task looking through the highlights of over 300 new features.

Tue, 27 Nov 2007 ↓
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£85
Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard Review
Desktop OSs 4

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