Buy Parallels but install Windows via bootcamp.
You can "cold" boot straight into Windows if you want or you can run it virtualized while Mac OS runs. Win. Win.
Virtualization works best when you have a TON of resources to throw at it. SSD instead of traditional spinning disk drives makes a huge performance difference as well.
chevalier, do you mean that Parallels can mount the info installed into Bootcamp and run that… Or do you mean install twice, once into Bootcamp and once into Parallels? Just wondering as the product would require licence activation, even though it is running on the same hardware, I am not sure if the licence server would throw a spanner in the works or not?
Stephen Marsh
That is nice to know! Thanks for the feedback guys, I am running Parallels 8 if that makes a difference.
Stephen Marsh
chevalier, do you mean that Parallels can mount the info installed into Bootcamp and run that… Or do you mean install twice, once into Bootcamp and once into Parallels? Just wondering as the product would require licence activation, even though it is running on the same hardware, I am not sure if the licence server would throw a spanner in the works or not?
Stephen Marsh
I generally give Parallels 1/3 of the resources of my computer. MacOS 10.7, 10.8 10.9 all need ~2GB of RAM at a minimum just to maintain host OS stability.
This is a good thing to remember. When going the Parallels/WMware Fusion route, you are splitting your computers power in half pretty much. You can adjust this of course, setting windows to use a core or 2 and how much ram it has, but its never running the full power your computer has. You are also taking away from the power of your macs resources this way. The bootcamp option gives you the best of both worlds in this case. For me, I upgrade my computer every few years, and found it much simpler when its simply a virtual machine in parallels and not a partition. Things copy over with less headaches from my experience.
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