Hi,

Fusion and bootcamp are both great. Which is best for you depends entirely on what your needs are. I chose fusion because I only want to do the odd thing in windows and I don't want to interupt the rest of my computing life to take care of windows business. If you don't care about the seperation, then bootcamp is free and more than adaquit.

Fusion is %100 accessible, don't worry about a thing there.
There are several good key mapping utilities, but since I'm a window- eyes user I don't need them and have largely ignored the threads on them.

When you install windows on fusion it will place your mac home folder as a shared drive under my computer. I enhanced this by moving the target of my documents on the windows side to the documents folder of my home folder on the mac. That means no copying and pasting is required between my documents under windows and /users/rico/documents on my mac.

Hope this helps,
erik burggraaf

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On 29-Jul-08, at 11:32 AM, Tiffany D wrote:

Geia sas,

So I've decided to go with Fusion rather than Bootcamp.  A very
knowledgible friend told me it was a better bet.  However, he's
familiar only with Windows and not Mac.  So how accessible is Fusion
on the mac in general?  Can I have a shared folder and move files
between the two systems like he said?  What kinds of drivers will I
need to get so that Windows will recognise the keys on my Mac?  If
Fusion isn't the best option for vmware, then what is?

Thanks,
Tiffanitsa



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