Any talk of Apple's Boot Camp software exposing the company's operating system to security risks is just hype and should be ignored, according to analyst firm Gartner.
Microsoft has promised it will keep producing software for the Mac for a minimum of five years.
Corel bills its WordPerfect Office software as "the world's leading alternative to Microsoft Office." But when it comes to US retail sales, Corel lost the No. 2 spot in 2005 to a somewhat unlikely competitor: Apple Computer's iWork.
As Apple Computer introduced its own productivity software Tuesday, Microsoft reiterated its commitment to the Mac market and said sales of its Mac Office package are growing.
Alarmist advice and unbacked claims by security software vendor Symantec has the Macintosh community up in arms.
Within hours of arriving at the AusCERT conference in the Gold Coast on Monday, my PowerBook decided it would rather commit suicide than listen to Microsoft's top security executives answer questions about Vista.
There are some strings attached to running Microsoft's OS on a Mac -- including Windows security risks, Apple says.
Alarmist advice and unbacked claims by security software vendor Symantec has the Macintosh community up in arms.
After the PC revolution, most software makers started subscribing to the theory that bigger means better. But does it? Jonathan Yarden looks back at how Windows became so feature-heavy and tells you why he thinks Microsoft needs to go back to the basics.
When Microsoft releases its SQL Server 2005 database on Nov. 7, it will have been five years since the last version debuted. If Windows Vista arrives as scheduled next fall, it too will follow its predecessor by five years.
Will Windows Vista provide the boost Linux has been waiting for?
Company updates productivity software's layout and organisation tools.
Apple Computer has released a public beta version of Boot Camp, software that lets Intel-based Macs natively run Windows XP.
Apple gives the people what they want: Windows on Macs. Geeks proved it could be done through a variety of complicated hacks and now Apple makes it a breeze with a free download. We take Boot Camp for a test run.
Alarmist advice and unbacked claims by security software vendor Symantec has the Macintosh community up in arms.
Apple Computer plans to continue rapidly bringing out new versions of Mac OS X, but it won't continue at quite the pace it's maintained in recent years.
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Can not-so-smart meters help the NBN?
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Has New Zealand's smiling assassin delivered?
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