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Apple to charge Mac OS X Tiger users for final Boot Camp release?

Submitted by Alexandros Roussos on Sat, 2007-01-20 13:17
  • News and rumours

According to a report MacScoop has obtained, Apple will charge current users of Mac OS X Tiger for the final version of Boot Camp that will be released at the same time as Mac OS X Leopard, this Spring.

Though the source wasn't sure about the final pricing, the report said there is strong possibility that Apple's boot manager software, allowing to use Windows and Mac OS X in dual boot mode will be sold for $29 to Tiger users.

Boot Camp will be one of the features included in Leopard, which means that Tiger users who want to use Boot Camp will also have the option to upgrade to Leopard instead of paying for the final version of Apple's Windows dual boot solution.

Apple is also expected to officially support Microsoft's Windows Vista operating system with the final version of Boot Camp.

When Apple announced Boot Camp in April 2006, the company did not clarify if Boot Camp would remain free for Tiger users in its final version.

Apple recently negatively surprised users of the latest generation Intel Macs by releasing a $1.99 software update, enabling 802.11n wifi on their Airport adapters.

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I was expecting this but I'm

Submitted by davidx on Sat, 2007-01-20 14:16.

I was expecting this but I'm planning to upgrade to Leopard anyway.

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Apple recently negatively

Submitted by VesperDEM on Sat, 2007-01-20 21:14.

Apple recently negatively surprised users of the latest generation Intel Macs by releasing a $1.99 software update, enabling 802.11n wifi on their Airport adapters.

Would someone please explain to me why this is a bad thing? The way I see it, instead of spending $1000 or more for a whole new computer/notebook, I only have to spend $4.99... Whoops, sorry, it's now $1.99 due to all the griping the bloggers are doing. So, again, how is this a bad thing?

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I gonna tell you how this is

Submitted by rpgmaker on Sun, 2007-01-21 21:11.

I gonna tell you how this is bad:

First of all you pay for ALL your Mac and you can't use it in all its glory 'cause a CLOSED company want you to pay for something that you ALREADY buy without knowing it, in the first place. You PAY for it already. You can't use it 'cause Apple want to charge you for something that you BUY and you can't do nothing about it 'cause your OS is CLOSED and THE ONLY ONES who REALLY have control over it is APPLE.

Now you understand how "this is bad" you Apple's lamb?

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Really, you ought to read a

Submitted by kapowaz on Mon, 2007-01-22 13:59.

Really, you ought to read a little more deeply on the issue before making such emotional outbursts or calling people "Apple's Lamb". Apple are legally required to charge for adding this feature for accounting reasons, as is mentioned here.

I agree that it is poor to charge for extra features that have merely been enabled through software changes, but surely the negligible $1.99 fee shows that Apple aren't intending to use this to make a profit? Consider how much that $1.99 is as a percentage of the whole cost of a MacBook or MacBook Pro.

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However this is a really bad

Submitted by rpgmaker on Mon, 2007-01-22 18:16.

However this is a really bad attempt to the costumers's rights. The point of this is that you could pay for it in the price of the Mac when you buy it. You buy the Mac with a feature that Apple hide from you and now you have to pay them to get that feature enabled...

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So Linksys, and Nokia for

Submitted by saforbes99 on Tue, 2007-01-23 08:29.

So Linksys, and Nokia for the N800, the manufactures of my DVD drives, etc are all breaking the law because they actually update their firmwares and allow us to download they without an additional charge?

Please, if there is any legal reason, then it is because of the way Apple wants to do it. Stupid of them...

Funny how I just updated my Nokia N800 firmware last weekend...

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It's a bad thing for a

Submitted by badtz.maru on Sun, 2007-01-21 23:18.

It's a bad thing for a company to saddle its customers with micro-payments to enable features on hardware that a customer already bought. Someone who purchased a Mac eligible for the upgrade already has wifi hardware in it capable of 802.11b/g/n, it's just that the firmware at the time of purchase had the "n" capabilities disabled. Anyone in "the know" lately knows that recent Macs were n-capable in hardware, just that the firmware & software didn't permit it yet. One would then assume that the n-capabilities would be provided down the line via "Software Update," not via an additional purchase.

Does this start a precedent for Apple to charge for other software and firmware updates? Is this a slow start to ease Mac customers into acceptance of paying for updates of currently owned products in the future? Like if the new Airport Extreme is buggy and unstable, will we have to pay for firmware upgrades to have something that works correctly?

I also suspect that Apple stalled on "n" in their Macs until their own "n" products were announced, like the Airport Extreme base station (lame without gigabit ethernet ports) and Apple TV (lame because this could've at least had WiFi router capabilities), in an attempt to steer customers to Apple products and not drift to competitors.

Apple is starting to look more like Microsoft every day, and they're getting to arrogant when they should be kissing their customers' butts to become Mac users, not nickle and dime them and release weak products.

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How can you say that

Submitted by saforbes99 on Mon, 2007-01-22 06:18.

How can you say that manufactures charging for firmware updates is not a bad thing? This is a ridiculous president they are setting. BIOS, DVD burner, Router, etc. not working properly? Just pay us a few bucks and we will give you new firmware. This is sick!

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It is a dangerous precedent

Submitted by John on Sun, 2007-01-28 18:23.

It is a dangerous precedent to willing go and give Apple money for something already bought. What’s next? Accounting does not require anyone to charge for anything, if you want to give away product or services it is no one’s business. How about us who continue to buy and use Apple OS and constantly upgrade because of either buggy software or some security risk. It seems that we as consumers are buying a defective product that at the discursion of the manufacturer is constantly changed. We live with this and pay up front to Apple knowing that the OS is buggy and in some cases ceases to work with certain applications and hardware, were is Apple’s liability. How about the ibook premature failures were Apple identified the problem with video circuit but failed to recall the units but simply extended the warranty. The ibook was doomed to fail either during that extended warranty or shortly after. My ibook failed 30 days after it expired. Apple did not repair the unit and getting it fixed was much too expensive. Apple is becoming another large cooperation were the bottom dollar rules and no longer deserves any loyalties to either product or services and as such has to be treated like any other large company. The illusion of personal touch and customer care continues because we as Apple users never question but follow.

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This is great. It will

Submitted by davebarnes on Sun, 2007-01-21 16:47.

This is great.
It will encourage more people to move to Leopard at a faster rate.
More revenue for Apple. More profits for Apple. More Macs for us to buy. Yea!
Apple does not expect anyone to pay $29 just for Boot Camp. They expect people to pay $129 to upgrade to Leopard. Or, you can buy Parallels for $80.

Dave Barnes
+1.303.744.9024
Living in my basement with my Power Mac

Dave Barnes
+1.303.744.9024
Living in my basement with my Power Mac

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Will boot camp run Vista?

Submitted by spade0013 on Mon, 2007-01-22 01:49.

Will boot camp run Vista?

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They (Apple) announced this

Submitted by jdawgnoonan on Mon, 2007-01-22 04:05.

They (Apple) announced this when Boot Camp was originally released. It was always going to be a Leopard feature and only free as a beta for Tiger. I do not have any problem with this.

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Yeah, I'm not terribly

Submitted by pescabicicleta on Mon, 2007-01-22 17:23.

Yeah, I'm not terribly concerned. To be honest, I'll probably go with the $29 Bootcamp, as I'm not at all enthused about the "Time Machine" feature of Leopard. When I kill a file, I want it to stay dead. If I want zombies, I back up the corpses myself.

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Yes Boot Camp will run vista

Submitted by switching_to_mac107 on Mon, 2007-07-16 16:59.

Yes Boot Camp will run vista

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