Installed Parallels on MacBook Pro
I blogged a few weeks ago about how I had recently purchased a MacBook Pro after having using Windows based PC’s my entire professional life. I knew going in that the transition to a Mac wasn’t going to come fast, I had spent years learning shortcuts and applications inside the Windows environment and honestly some things about the Mac are total opposite. While I still have continued to use my Dev1 and Dev2 machines for client projects and actual production, I have been tinkering around w/ the MacBook as much as possible to familiarize myself with it.
Going into this whole thing w/ the Mac, I knew that I would have to have some sort of virtual environment for me to run native Windows applications because some of my day to day applications don’t have a Mac friendly counterpart. Two cases in point, PHPRunner and WS-FTP Pro. Well, in the case of WS-FTP Pro, the manufacturer, IPSWITCH, has a Mac alternative called Fetch, but you can’t import from WS-FTP Pro into it. To the normal user, this probably wouldn’t be an issue, but for me, I have over 700 client FTP connections loaded in WS-FTP Pro and I wasn’t about to re-enter a single one of these by hand.
Well, I looked into Boot Camp, a free product from Apple that would basically allow me to boot up in Windows or Mac OS, but to me that just seems a little too much like work. I then checked out the VMWare product for the Mac and it didn’t impress me as much as the Parallels solution so I installed Parallels. A short while into the installation process it asked me to insert a Windows XP or Vista disk. I found an old XP Professional and loaded it up. The Parallels solution installed Windows XP on my machine and I now have a start bar docked w/ my native Mac applications as well as my IDE, PHPRunner, which also is a native Windows application. I also was able to install Office Professional 2003 very easily and now, instead of trying to wrestle with getting my .PST files from Outlook imported into Entourage, I can just run Outlook on my Mac.
The best thing about Parallels that I can tell right now is that it allows Windows and Apple based applications to coexist w/out having to boot out of one OS into another.





