If you are running windows under bootcamp, you cannot see your leopard partition. I don't know how this works in the vmware packages. I have heard though that it is possible to cross pollinate. Bootcamp allows you to use the full capacity of your Mac hardware sans the partition for leopard to run windows. With bootcamp, you can hold down the optin key as your system starts and choose which os you want. that does not talk but it is only the press of an arrow key and easy to figure out. You can also set a preference for which os to start when the option key is not pressed. I have two computers running bootcamp, one starts in Mac OS and the other in broken glass.
----- Original Message ----- From: "Tiffany D" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, April 30, 2008 11:16 PM Subject: Fusion Versus Bootcamp What's the difference, in accessibility, between Fusion and Bootcamp. I know one is a virtual machine and the other really installs windows or whatever os you're using. Which is better? If I were to use Fusion, would I literally have to install Windows every time? I highly doubt I could access files stored in Leopared using Fusion because it's virtual, but I heard this is true with Bootcamp as well. But I've also heard of something called Parallel, which enables you to use both systems symultaniously and drag and drop from one to the other. How accessible is that? Thanks, Tiffanitsa
