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well if you have a imac or such

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First Tests: PC World Installs Windows XP on a 20-Inch iMac With Boot Camp

 

Our graphics tests show similar performance to that of Core Duo notebooks.

 

Eric Dahl, PC World

 

Wednesday, April 05, 2006

 

It works. Impressively well. With games, even. You can see our detailed test results below, but that's our first impression of Windows XP running under Apple's Boot Camp on our 20-inch iMac. And that's more than you could say a couple of days ago about the promising-but-hacked-together WinXPonMac effort.

 

Eager to get our hands on a real, dual-booting Apple/Windows hybrid, we ran the Boot Camp installer on a 20-inch iMac and found the process amazingly smooth. It took about an hour. (You can download Boot Camp here.) Graphics drivers--the major remaining performance hurdle under WinXPonMac--were solid and responsive under limited testing on our iMac.

 

Booting With Boot Camp

 

Boot Camp requires the latest version of Mac OS X (version 10.4.6) and a firmware update (a very loud, un-Mac-like system beep is normal at the start of this process). Once you've properly updated your system, you can download, install, and run Boot Camp Assistant, which burns a CD of Windows drivers for you and walks you through the process of repartitioning your Mac and installing Windows XP.

 

I chose to give XP a 100GB partition and inserted my XP Service Pack 2 CD to begin the installation process. XP's familiar, pixelated installation process went normally, and the Boot Camp manual provided intelligent directions about how to tell XP which partition to use and how to format that partition. (If you choose FAT instead of NTFS, you'll be able to write files to the XP volume while you're running Mac OS.)

 

On our iMac test machine, Boot Camp was endearingly smart about automating the series of required reboots to get you set up in XP. Once XP was set up to my satisfaction, I held down the Option key while rebooting and used the bootloader to hop back into OS X.

 

Once there, I used the Startup Disk preferences page that Boot Camp installs to ensure that XP was set as the default OS. Boot Camp installs a corresponding Control Panel app in Windows so you can change this setting in either OS.

 

No Hitches So Far

 

So far, working in Windows on the Intel-based iMac has come off without a hitch: If not for the slicker-looking hardware, I'd think I was working on a standard Windows PC with a wide-screen monitor. And that's exactly what you'd want from a usable dual-boot system.

 

Firefox downloaded and installed flawlessly, and iTunes streamed songs easily from other PCs on the network. Both wired and wireless networking seemed fine. Little things, like the eject key on the Mac's keyboard, worked without a hiccup. Even automatic driver updates downloaded and installed easily.

 

All in all, Boot Camp looks like an impressive effort from Apple. Over the next few days, we'll continue to put our 20-inch iMac/Windows box through its paces and analyze how this new dual-boot option could affect the PC world.

 

Performance?

 

Back in Windows, I got right down to business and installed a few games to put the graphics and sound support to the test. The quick and dirty verdict on performance? Most impressive. Doom 3 and Far Cry both ran smoothly with high-end graphics options turned on.

 

In both cases, I had to tweak visual settings manually, since the games automatically set themselves to very low settings. Far Cry, for example, autodetected very low settings, but it ran without a hitch when I bumped the resolution up to 1280 by 720, with all visual quality options set to "High."

 

Our 20-inch iMac came with a 2.0-GHz Core Duo processor, 1GB of RAM, and an ATI Radeon X1600 graphics card with 128MB of GDDR3 memory. That's roughly equivalent to a high-end laptop machine, and anecdotally the performance I obtained was about what I'd have expected from that type of PC.

 

Graphics Tests Results

 

Update (4/6/06): The first graphics test results are in for the 20-inch iMac, and Windows XP under Boot Camp continues to impress. In our Doom 3 and Far Cry benchmarks, the iMac ran neck and neck with a pair of notebook systems equipped with Intel Core Duo processors and similar graphics hardware.

 

Here's a snapshot of the results in our tests without antialiasing. Check back tomorrow for the WorldBench 5 scores we promised you. In the meantime, head on over to Macworld for its take on Boot Camp-enabled gaming.

 

Tested system

 

Boot Camp iMac

 

20-inch iMac (2-GHz Core Duo, 1GB RAM, Radeon X1600 graphics with 128MB)

 

Doom 3 1024 by 768 (no AA), 48fps

 

Doom 3 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 41fps

 

Far Cry 1024 by 768 (no AA), 93fps

 

Far Cry 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 65fps

 

Comparable Notebook PCs

 

HP Compaq nx9420 (2.16-GHz Core Duo, 1GB RAM, ATI Mobility Radeon X1600 graphics with 256MB)

 

Doom 3 1024 by 768 (no AA), 44fps

 

Doom 3 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 37fps

 

Far Cry 1024 by 768 (no AA), 92fps

 

Far Cry 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 62fps

 

Acer TravelMate 8200 (2-GHz Core Duo, 2GB RAM, ATI Mobility Radeon X1600 graphics with 256MB)

 

Doom 3 1024 by 768 (no AA),56fps

 

Doom 3 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 47fps

 

Far Cry 1024 by 768 (no AA), 101fps

 

Far Cry 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 77fps

 

Similarly Performing Desktop PCs

 

WinBook PowerSpec Extreme 9200 (2.2-GHz Athlon 64 X2 4200+, 2GB RAM, nVidia GeForce 6600 graphics with 256MB)

 

Doom 3 1024 by 768 (no AA),54fps

 

Doom 3 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 46fps

 

Far Cry 1024 by 768 (no AA), 75fps

 

Far Cry 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 51fps

 

CyberPower Media Center Ultra Edition (3-GHz Pentium D 830, 1GB RAM, nVidia GeForce 6600 graphics with 256MB)

 

Doom 3 1024 by 768 (no AA),53fps

 

Doom 3 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 46fps

 

Far Cry 1024 by 768 (no AA), 72fps

 

Far Cry 1600 by 1200 (no AA), 51fps

bf2 on a mac?

it's like the combination of Mac's awesome looking computers with the one OS that supports most games!

I am really considering getting one after this

Not bad. Not bad. You can now be all graphic artsy fartsy with Mac software and OWN in games after rebooting. Pretty cool.

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