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Parallels to make switching to the Mac easier, safe and painless
DigitalBeat ^ | Monday, August 24, 2009 | Dean Takahashi

Posted on 08/25/2009 7:35:29 PM PDT by Star Traveler

Parallels to make switching to the Mac easier, safe and painless
August 24, 2009
by Dean Takahashi

In the Windows vs. Mac war, we are at a crossroads. Apple is launching its Snow Leopard version of the Mac operating system on Friday at the low price of $29. Microsoft’s Windows 7 operating system will launch in October with the primary aim of fixing the problems created by Windows Vista.

There has never been a better time to switch to the Mac. Parallels, which makes software so you can run Windows or Mac software on the same machine and use them at the same time, is jumping on the opportunity. Today, it is launching Parallels Desktop 4.0 Switch to Mac Edition software.

The goal is to extend a lifeline to frustrated PC users by making it dead simple to switch from Windows to the Mac OS X. It includes a universal serial bus (USB) cable that you connect between your older Windows computer and a new Mac. It automatically starts a utility that transfers all of the programs and important data from the old computer to the new one. It then allows you to run properly licensed Windows programs on the Mac.

Renton, Wash.-based Parallels has made its virtualization software for many years and it now has 700 employees. It launched the fourth edition of its Parallels Desktop product last year. It creates a software layer that allows a computer to run both Mac and Windows software programs at the same time.

This software is dangerous to Microsoft. With the new Mac OS priced at $29, Apple clearly is going after “switchers.” If there are enough switchers, then Microsoft may have to start worrying about competition from Apple again, if it hasn’t already been worried enough. Right now, about half of all Macs being sold are going to Windows users who have never owned a Mac before.

Serguei Beloussov, chief executive of Parallels, said in an interview that many people who want to switch have been intimidated in the past because they didn’t understand how to do it without losing data or throwing away investments in software. Beloussov said the company has addressed those concerns by including how-to videos as tutorials and simplifying the transfer tools.

In the past, virtualization software has run slowly as it translates programs from one environment to another. But Beloussov said that with today’s modern hardware, the slowdown is not perceptible. Parallels software can even run a variety of games, which are among the most demanding applications. You still can’t run some games with highly realistic 3-D graphics, such as Far Cry 2, Call of Duty: Modern Warfare, or Crysis.

The Parallels software also comes with two hours of tutorials that teach people how to use the Mac and help them understand the differences between the Mac and Windows. With Parallels, you can run Windows and Mac programs side-by-side. I think it’s cool that Parallels has stopped thinking like it was just a utility company and is now thinking of how to broaden the market for its software — and the Mac. The software costs $99.99.


TOPICS: Computers/Internet
KEYWORDS: apple; ilovebillgates; iwanthim; iwanthimbad; macintosh; macosx; microsoft; microsoftfanboys
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To: altair
Just one comment... :-)

Unix (officially trademarked as UNIX, sometimes also written as Unix with small caps) is a computer operating system originally developed in 1969 by a group of AT&T employees at Bell Labs, including Ken Thompson, Dennis Ritchie, Brian Kernighan, Douglas McIlroy, and Joe Ossanna.
Wikipedia Article link
61 posted on 08/27/2009 5:07:02 PM PDT by Star Traveler (The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is a Zionist and Jerusalem is the apple of His eye.)
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To: altair
Mac OS X is Unix inside and Unix is not an acronym.

Both statements are true... but the official trademark of Unix is UNIX™ or UNIX™ with either all caps or small caps for the last three characters, so either Unix or UNIX are correct in text.

62 posted on 08/27/2009 10:05:43 PM PDT by Swordmaker (Remember, the proper pronunciation of IE is "AAAAIIIIIEEEEEEE!)
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To: Star Traveler
I'm kind of like the last person in the world you want to throw Wikipedia links at :-). Especially Unix links ...

Unix was created by Ken & Dennis after coming off of the Multics project. Unix is a "weak pun" on Multics. Ken Thompson needed something to run a space war game on a shiny new PDP 7. Dennis wrote a compiler for him. Deciding they needed to prove to their managers that they were really working, they sold the project to management as a document writing platform. Dennis Ritchie wrote the first file system (the setuid bit patent bears his name). Joe Ossanna wrote troff. The memory pressure that troff brought to bear on the system lead them to divide i & d space thus bringing the total process memory to a whopping 128k.

Writing the kernel mostly in a high level language proved to be a stroke of genius that would change the computing world forever, though it would take another decade and a half for the rest of the world to figure this out.

Dennis Ritchie's compiler was never ported away from the PDP. Steve Johnson wrote the "portable C compiler" which would ultimately inspire gcc.

Due to AT&T's status as a telephone monopoly, they were not allowed to commercialize the system. That wouldn't come until the 1980s and they did that as badly as they anything non-technical - "AT&T couldn't market eternal life".

Because they couldn't market the system, it was distributed as source code to Universities and eventually folks at Berkeley picked it up and hacked on it to produce BSD. Source licenses were typical through the 1980s. My first official on-the-job experience with Unix in 1987 was on a Pyramid that had a hybrid interface divided into universes (with source code). You could either select a BSD-ish or a System V-ish style system interface. Sadly, Pyramid did not revolutionize the world, but they were awesome machines for their time.

The earliest Unix box I got my hands on personally was a Stride 440 running a beta System V/R2 in 1985. Sadly, their Unix port never supported the bit mapped graphics that their hardware supported. The AT&T 3B1 aka Unix PC, which was the first commercial Unix desktop, predated Microsoft Windows and did support bitmapped graphics and a mouse, but was marketed very badly. It didn't become particularly reasonable to buy until after it was EOLed.

Oh Unix, how I love thee (and how good you look on my Macbook Pro) ...

63 posted on 08/27/2009 11:30:49 PM PDT by altair (Bring back the poll tax - if you paid net income taxes you can vote, otherwise you can't)
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To: altair

You said — I’m kind of like the last person in the world you want to throw Wikipedia links at :-). Especially Unix links ...

Then I’ll throw a couple of different links at you... :-)


Mac OS X v10.5 “Leopard” and The UNIX® You Know, The Mac You Love

The most widely-sold UNIX operating system, Mac OS X version 10.5 Leopard combines a fully-conformant UNIX foundation with the richness and usability of the Macintosh interface, bringing multi-core technology and 64-bit power to the mass market. In Leopard, the new tabbed Terminal, Ruby on Rails web application stack, and powerful scripting bridges make UNIX users more productive than ever.

[ ... ]

http://developer.apple.com/unix/


And...

Make UNIX work with Windows XP and Mac OS X

Be a good server to your client workstations
Chris Herborth (chrish@pobox.com), Freelance Writer, Consultant

Summary: Learn about using a UNIX® system as a primary domain controller (PDC) and file repository, including an anonymous, read-only shared area accessible by anyone with a Web browser. To be a good citizen on your local network, you need to integrate your favorite UNIX system with the networking features of client systems, generally running Windows® XP or Mac OS X. This makes it easier for the users of those workstations to take advantage of the centralized authentication and storage facilities you can provide.

http://www.ibm.com/developerworks/aix/library/au-unixothers/

UNIX for Mac OS X: Visual QuickPro Guide
http://www.amazon.com/dp/0201795353

or...

UNIX Tips for Mac OS X

Here is a list of short tips on using various UNIX tools under Mac OS X - some of them might just be reminders for myself. Some of them are also applicable to other flavors of UNIX.

http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~benhdj/Mac/unix.html


64 posted on 08/28/2009 3:04:20 AM PDT by Star Traveler (The God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob is a Zionist and Jerusalem is the apple of His eye.)
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To: Star Traveler
Then I’ll throw a couple of different links at you... :-)

:-)

Mac OS X v10.5 “Leopard” and The UNIX® You Know, The Mac You Love

The Unix and Mac I love, but close enough ... and certainly Works For Me.

Thanks for the links.

65 posted on 08/28/2009 11:18:44 PM PDT by altair (Bring back the poll tax - if you paid net income taxes you can vote, otherwise you can't)
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