EDIT: Major Chord, If you get a Mac, here's my handy-dandy guide for getting Windows-users into the Mac world. Think of it as a crash course. Give me 45 minutes and I promise you that you'll be in the top 25% of Mac users in terms of what you know!
http://videocarpenter.wordpress.com/2010/03/23/your-new-mac/
There are 3, but you listed Parallels and Fusion as 2 different things, which I cound as 1 thing:
1) Windows in Boot Camp
2) Windows in Virtualizers (Parallels or Fusion)
3) Windows PROGRAMS in WINE-based software:
http://winebottler.kronenberg.org/
That last option there will let you run IE in OS X without a copy of Windows.
That kind of thing is not great if you really do want Windows and Outlook and Word and so on and so on.
But if you just want one program and ALL you need it for is things like signing up for classes...then a Wine-based solution might be best.
(DISCLAIMER: I have NEVER used a Wine program...all I know about it is reading thing on the internet.)
And Major Chord, remember to buy your Mac using their student pricing. Get the Macbook but change the RAM to 4 GB and the hard drive to 320 GB. You'll get a better computer and it will STILL come to $1,034 after the student discount.
Also, get the Mac without buying a word processor right away. Download the free trial of Pages and see what you think. It's $79 which is a lot cheaper than Word which is $150 for the student version.
But get the trial. You might not like Pages in which case it's worth buying what you like.
But know that Pages can open Word files AND save as a Word document, so if you can learn the interface, you'll be fine to work with other students by sharing Word files back and forth even though you use Pages.
And finally, buy a small, bus-powered USB hard drive (500 GB) and plug it in whenever you're sitting at your desk. Give control of the drive to 'Time Machine' and then ignore it. Hide it in a drawer whenever you leave the room.
Automatic backups are SO easy on a Mac that it's downright stupid to skip this step. ESPECIALLY with a laptop that can be lost or stolen or broken.
http://videocarpenter.wordpress.com/2010/03/23/your-new-mac/
^There are three main ways.
There are 3, but you listed Parallels and Fusion as 2 different things, which I cound as 1 thing:
1) Windows in Boot Camp
2) Windows in Virtualizers (Parallels or Fusion)
3) Windows PROGRAMS in WINE-based software:
http://winebottler.kronenberg.org/
That last option there will let you run IE in OS X without a copy of Windows.
That kind of thing is not great if you really do want Windows and Outlook and Word and so on and so on.
But if you just want one program and ALL you need it for is things like signing up for classes...then a Wine-based solution might be best.
(DISCLAIMER: I have NEVER used a Wine program...all I know about it is reading thing on the internet.)
And Major Chord, remember to buy your Mac using their student pricing. Get the Macbook but change the RAM to 4 GB and the hard drive to 320 GB. You'll get a better computer and it will STILL come to $1,034 after the student discount.
Also, get the Mac without buying a word processor right away. Download the free trial of Pages and see what you think. It's $79 which is a lot cheaper than Word which is $150 for the student version.
But get the trial. You might not like Pages in which case it's worth buying what you like.
But know that Pages can open Word files AND save as a Word document, so if you can learn the interface, you'll be fine to work with other students by sharing Word files back and forth even though you use Pages.
And finally, buy a small, bus-powered USB hard drive (500 GB) and plug it in whenever you're sitting at your desk. Give control of the drive to 'Time Machine' and then ignore it. Hide it in a drawer whenever you leave the room.
Automatic backups are SO easy on a Mac that it's downright stupid to skip this step. ESPECIALLY with a laptop that can be lost or stolen or broken.
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