Do you know what Boot Camp is? It’s not virtualization. First, it’s a partitioning tool to non-destructively create a partition for Windows, just like in any other PC. Then you boot from your Windows install disk, format that partition and install Windows like you always do.
Then Boot Camp is a disk full of Windows drivers (you make this disk when setting up Boot Camp) that you put into your newly-booted Windows machine, where all the drivers are automatically installed.
If you have problems, you have problems with drivers, just like with any OEM machine, especially with Vista.
It’s clear at this point that you guys just don’t want to get it. I’ve fought this battle many many times in my professional career and was ALWAYS proven right, on good days I was proven right after winning the battle, on bad days the customers wound up proving me right. But it ALWAYS happens, there is ALWAYS a difference and it ALWAYS makes bugs. Sometimes minor, sometimes major, sometimes insurmountable. It is guaranteed. I showed you guys differences, if you want to write them off like marketing dorks that’s not my problems, differences exist, I proved it, you’re wrong. I’m done reading posts from guys that want to be marketers, especially when they were given the link proving why nobody in the industry respects marketers, the differences are there, it doesn’t matter at all if they’re “just” device drivers (of course only a complete moron would write off a device driver problem as “just”, when the OS can’t talk to the devices the computer is useless, devices are what the computer is all about) they ARE problems, they ARE differences.
And of course the real meat of it is that most software companies DO NOT support their software written for PCs on Macs. So if you really want to continue this conversation do it with them, because I am 100% done with this thread, no more posts on it will be read by me under any circumstances.