
Keep in mind as they both are running windows and they both have access to all your files. A emulator is just as vulnerable and will have the same effects. And if your computer gets sick, all of your Mac OS X files are corrupted aswell.

Bootcamp works great.īootcamp does have access to all of your system files so if you do use it be careful when using the internet because Windows is SOOOOOOOOOOOOOO.

Using a Windows emulator like VMWare or Parallels is a mess. I had to do that every few minutes in VMWare. I have had it on the iMac for two and a half years ond on the MacBook Pro for a few months and have never had ONE hardware or sofware fail. It just STINKS! It would always crash on my Macbook Pro and on my 2009 iMac.īoot camp has been living on both my macs ever since then and it works wonders. Its a bit problematic to download games from the internet in a DOS environment:P Sadly with limited hours in a day and a need to sleep through half of them, I dont get much time for fun stuff like that any more, so they dont come into consideration during my decision making process.I have 15'' 2011 MacBook Pro that USED to run VMWare. Its a bit problematic to download games from the internet in a DOS environment:P But I guess you could install windows 3.11 and use Netscape Navigator:P You could use Windows 9598 as they are based on top of DOS, you can just reboot into DOS from the shut down menu on those (instead of just having the command line). They are distinct so you know they are running through VMware but its almost the perfect solution And its really nicely implemented Its a bit problematic to download games from the internet in a DOS environment:P But I guess you could install windows 3.11 and use Netscape Navigator:P DOSBox works perfectly for most games (although I have some problems getting Malcolms Revenge to work properly) And I still believe it will work just fine in Mac OS 9. They are distinct so you know they are running through VMware but its almost the perfect solution And its really nicely implemented. VMWare a well known and established commercial VM product offers a great feature called unity where you would have the interface of the host machine run as normal then programs inside the virtual machine appear as if they are running native. Not the answer youre looking for Browse other questions tagged xcode macos ios-simulator vmware-workstation or ask your own question. Making statements based on opinion back them up with references or personal experience.

) Not that apple ever chased down an average joe for violating the licence. So if youre worried about licence, just grab a cloud vm in Australia and youre sorted.
