The following guest post is from Todd Juneau, a registered patent attorney in Alexandria, Virginia:
I wanted to share a recent experience I had loading Windows on my Mac machines. In summary, I am very pleased with my Mac/Windows setup. A few years ago, I switched from Windows to Linux to Mac OS. After a few years, I wanted to install a law office practice management suite. Unfortunately, the ones I liked, ran on Windows. After much research trying to find a “work-around”, I tried to load Windows on my various Mac machines.
I used Boot Camp to let me run Windows on my iMac. It partitions the drive, lets you load Windows XP SP2 (or Vista), and gives you a way to switch OS’s by re-booting. Which (rebooting) by the way is extremely fast. Apparently, iMac’s are very happy running XP; my experience has been the same: fast. I know that Parallels and other VM software lets you run both OS’s at the same time, with fast switching, but I avoided this approach due to concerns I had about having a slow machine.
Once XP SP2 is loaded (you can buy XP SP2 at Best Buy), then you can run all your favorite Windows programs natively. Of course, you’ll need to do all the XP updates (SP3 works well on my iMac) and you’ll need to get some antivirus software -- I used ClamWin since it is free and a fast download. I didn’t want my XP exposed to the internet without it – since Windows “announces” itself to networks, viruses can infect exposed machines within minutes, or less.
I’d recommend looking into getting the Mac Mini if you already have a flat screen and keyboard/mouse devices, Get the bigger one (the bigger Mini), with more memory and better combo-drive. Then, use your own flat screen, and a wireless keyboard/mouse set up –- check out Logitech EX110 –- it’s about $40. That way, you’ll have a “Windows” keyboard, which works well on the Mac OS side, instead of a “Mac” keyboard that is missing some of the special Windows functions –- sound, shortcuts, etc. It’s all so very compact.