Friday, April 07, 2006
More thoughts on Bootcamp
This appears to be the opposite strategy that Apple attempted in the 90s. The company licensed its OS to be loaded on hardware produced by other companies. It wasn't successful and Apple ultimately bought back the rights from the companies in question.
I was Skyping with my brother and I mentioned to him that Apple almost had no choice. It turns out that they have been working on this for some time. They were going to release it in OSX.5. With the maconxp project being successful, they released it earlier than expected (and to the suprise of the entire market). From everything I've read, the maturity of bootcamp is remarkable for a beta release.
Personally I can't see much of a downside for Apple. The Mac-Zealot market won't stop using OSX. There is simply too strong a following. But I can very much see that the Windows market might want to have Apple hardware to reduce the number of computers that one needs to have for anything from development to the curiosity of having a Mac.
One of the programmers that works with me has shared with me that this will almost certainly have him buying a Mac.
I was Skyping with my brother and I mentioned to him that Apple almost had no choice. It turns out that they have been working on this for some time. They were going to release it in OSX.5. With the maconxp project being successful, they released it earlier than expected (and to the suprise of the entire market). From everything I've read, the maturity of bootcamp is remarkable for a beta release.
Personally I can't see much of a downside for Apple. The Mac-Zealot market won't stop using OSX. There is simply too strong a following. But I can very much see that the Windows market might want to have Apple hardware to reduce the number of computers that one needs to have for anything from development to the curiosity of having a Mac.
One of the programmers that works with me has shared with me that this will almost certainly have him buying a Mac.