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Parallels Workstation vs. Boot Camp comparison chart

Posted by Aaron Freedman | Monday, April 24, 2006 1:08 PM PT

If one wishes to turn to the dark side by installing Windows on their Intel Mac, there are two ways to go about it, by using either Apple’s Boot Camp or Parallels Workstation. Each way has its advantages and disadvantages, but it can sometimes be hard to tell which one’s for you. That’s why I decided to create a chart that compares the features of the two. Hopefully, my chart will be very helpful in making the choice of which path to the evil is the best.

 Apple Boot CampParallels Workstation Beta
Basic Information
CostFreeFree trial ($39.99 when full version released)
VersionBetaBeta
MethodDual-bootVirtualization
Installation
Requirement of Full Partition (a.k.a. have to fully erase drive)NoNo
Types of Operating Systems SupportedWindows XP SP2 Home or ProWindows 3.1, 3.11, 95, 98, Me, 2000, NT, XP, 2003, any Linux distribution, FreeBSD, Solaris, OS/2, eComStation, MS-DOS
Ability for Hard Drive Size to Increase Over TimeNoYes
Usage
General Speed (in comparison to running OS by itself on the computer)100%90-95%
Maximum Number of Operating Systems (not including OS X)1Infinite
Maximum Number of Simultaneously Running Operating System(s) (including OS X)1Theoretically infinite (up to five without crashing tested by Macworld)
DirectX and OpenGL SupportYesYes (but can’t do 3D Games and DVDs for slow)
3D Graphics Acceleration Support YesNo
Full-Screen ModeYesYes
Dual-Monitor SupportYesYes
Networking (Ethernet and WiFi) SupportYesYes
Ease of Use and Bugs
Simple, Graphical InstallerYesYes
BugsVery fewFair amount
Comments (10)

I'd like to see this chart but its not working. tried to download the linked file and am greeted with the message that its not in right format...and I have the Microsoft Office. Hmmm...must have been done on a PC. (smiles)

April 24, 2006
7:51 AM PT

"Hmmm...must have been done on a PC. (smiles)"

Hey, I consider that very insulting. But seriously, I don't know why it didn't work. It worked when I downloaded it from off the server.

Aaron Author Profile Page
April 24, 2006
7:54 AM PT

It is a MS Excel file. it is posted very wierd. You might try downloading it and opening with firefox.

David
April 24, 2006
8:21 AM PT

Doesn't work for me either. What format should it be in ? After download it is .txt

Gerald
April 24, 2006
8:21 AM PT

Try it now.

Aaron Author Profile Page
April 24, 2006
8:28 AM PT

Download doesn't work for me either. Link points to and brings back this page.

Amar
April 24, 2006
2:21 PM PT

That's the point. The chart is right below the post.

Aaron Author Profile Page
April 24, 2006
2:25 PM PT

I tried both on my iMac & ended up removing boot camp after less than an hour because I didn't like having to reboot to use Windows. I'm now using Parallels Workstation both on my iMac and my MacBook Pro. The latest beta is very stable and it runs faster than my old Dell laptop. I now have Outlook & a MS Access application running in Windows XP while I'm working in Mac OS X on my iMac, which is exactly how I want to use Windows.

April 25, 2006
7:44 AM PT

The "90-95%" speed for Parallels Workstation Beta is too optimistic. In reality, virtualization is between 70% and 80% for normal applications and less than 10-15% for apps that require graphics acceleration or overlays (e.g. a DVD/movie player).

April 26, 2006
12:51 AM PT

If I wanted to use windows XP on my mac book pro and then get rid of it, is that possible? can both boot camp and parallels workstation be deleted? And If they can will this cause damage to my Mac OSX files?

trev
May 06, 2006
8:57 AM PT

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