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October 2nd, 2007

Will Boot Camp drive Leopard sales

Posted by Adrian Kingsley-Hughes @ 1:20 pm

Categories: Apple

Tags: Apple Inc., Sales, Boot Camp, Virtualization, Tools & Techniques, Storage Management, Utility Computing, Hardware, Management, Storage

In Focus » See more posts on: Leopard

Gregg Keizer over on Computerworld posted an warning for Boot Camp users:

The news was no secret: Apple had spelled it out on the Boot Camp download page and in the EULA (end user license agreement) included with the beta and posted on the Apple site. “The term of this License…will terminate automatically without notice from Apple upon the next commercial release of the Apple Software, or December 31, 2007, whichever occurs first,” the EULA states.

According to Apple, Windows partitions already installed on Macs using Boot Camp will continue to work, but the Assistant software, which sets up and manages those partitions, will not once the license expires. “And Apple will not offer driver updates to beta users,” said company spokesman Anuj Nayar in an e-mail today.

Boot Camp has been one of Apple’s killer apps and has received a lot of publicity, and it seems that Apple predicted this and added a time-bomb to the software in order to make sure that users who were hooked on it upgraded to Leopard.

Now this raises an interesting question - is Boot Camp worth upgrading to Leopard for? I used Boot Camp for a few weeks earlier this year and was highly impressed by it, certainly impressed enough to consider upgrading if I was using Max OS X. If you want the ultimate, go for Parallels, which is by far the best virtualization tool out there and the product that I really wished VMware Workstation was, but if you don’t want to spend the cash and just want a simple dual boot setup, Boot Camp is very nice indeed. I’m guessing that I’m not along in thinking like this and that a lot of people will be willing to fork over cash to Apple just for the privilege of running Boot Camp.

Thoughts?

Adrian Kingsley-HughesAdrian is a technology journalist and author who has devoted over a decade to helping users get the most from technology. He also runs a popular blog called The PC Doctor. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 16 Talkback(s)
I'm in my "right mind"
I'm not a gamer. My business required me to use an online reporting system that is not compatible with mac - no matter what I tried. Until my Dino-Dell died, I had to have 2 computers in my office. ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: dmnoren@... Posted on: 02/06/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Virtualization Software???  cornpie | 10/02/07
You're right  Len Rooney | 10/02/07
Boot Camp is not virtualization software.  ye | 10/02/07
RE: Will Boot Camp drive Leopard sales  pvora2 | 10/02/07
Typical Zdnet, none fact checking ...  n0neXn0ne | 10/02/07
Boot Camp? We don need no stinkin' Boot Camp!  D. T. Schmitz | 10/02/07
Me  Richard Flude | 10/02/07
Excellent Point!  D. T. Schmitz | 10/02/07
I'm in my "right mind"  dmnoren@... | 02/06/08
No, Boot Camp will not drive Leopard sales  R_Connelie@... | 10/02/07
Will Leopard improve on Boot Camp?  Ken_z | 10/02/07
If the 'Killer App'  mdemuth | 10/02/07
Sense & Sensibility  LazLong | 10/02/07
OEM Windows copy for new Macs  t_mohajir | 10/03/07
Um, why the assumption  frgough | 10/03/07
RE: Will Boot Camp drive Leopard sales  David Fenton | 10/25/07

What do you think?

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