>They have announced upcoming support, but I doubt that any serious
>gamer who maxes out their hardware would ever be happy with any VM.

I agree - I was thinking in terms of the developer working in DirectX 
or OpenGL or other 3D Hardware based API wanting to use a VM for 
development & testing and keeping a clean environment.

>         The hardcore gamers use BootCamp, which lets you install Windows
>directly as a dual-boot machine. Once you start it up, you're booting
>into native Windows, not running in a VM. A cool thing that Parallels
>added recently is that if you installed Windows into a partition for
>dual-booting, when you boot into Mac OS X, you can run your Windows
>partition as a VM. Best of both worlds.

That is cool a feature indeed!






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