

- #WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 UPGRADE#
- #WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 FULL#
- #WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 SOFTWARE#
- #WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 PC#
The lower scores reflect the differences accurately All of those effects are smooth when running under Boot Camp, but I can see tearing and jerky movements in a virtual machine. Both VMware and Parallels have decent drivers capable of delivering Aero support with transparency and other effects. Likewise, graphics performance in a VM suffers because Windows is unable to use the native Nvidia or Intel drivers and instead has to pass everything through virtualized graphics adapters. The difference is even more striking in the two MacBook Airs, where the different CPU models account for part of the gap but the VM adds a further penalty. For those two tasks, you're essentially losing half of the CPU by running in a VM. On my system, the Boot Camp installation scored 308 MB/s for the CPUCompression2Metric and 470.9 MB/s for the Encryption2Metric, versus 152.5 and 223.0 for the same metric under Parallels. You can see at a glance that virtualization takes a significant chunk of CPU capability away. It's at least $300 if you use commercial virtualization software, and possibly much more if you need to pay for additional licenses for Windows apps. That's a bare minimum of $250 on top of the premium cost you pay for Apple's hardware. If you plan to use Boot Camp exclusively, you can skip this line item. VirtualBox is a free option, but when I looked at it a few months ago it was behind the others in terms of Windows support. I've been able to find discounts that take the cost into the sub-$60 range.
#WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 SOFTWARE#
#WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 FULL#
#WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 UPGRADE#
But after a recent memory and disk upgrade I've been looking at virtualization software for OS X, which allows me to run Windows without having to first shut down OS X. On the Mac, I originally installed Windows 7 on a Boot Camp partition. So if a virtual machine can handle both Windows and OS X apps gracefully, I would have a much easier time moving back and forth.
#WINDOWS 7 BOOTCAMP DRIVERS FOR MAC MINI MID 2010 PC#
I have a handful of Windows programs that don't have Mac alternatives, and I have both a Mac and a Windows PC on my desktop.

That's actually a pretty compelling pitch for me. Apple pitches it as the way to run "specialty software." You know, "that one Windows application. That's a big selling point for Apple, which gives this feature a marquee position on its "Why You'll Love a Mac" page.
