Boot Camp could shine Apple image in education arena
Educators might be tempted to return to the Apple fold
April 12, 2006 12:00 PM ETComputerworld - Apples Boot Camp could be a boon to the companys presence in the education market. Once the almost exclusive domain of Apple and the Mac, technology in education has been steadily shifting toward Windows-based PCs for several years -- particularly in colleges and at the high school level of K-12 education. The reason most often given: Students will need to work with Windows PCs after graduation and should therefore be educated using them.
The ability for schools (at any grade level) to create truly cross-platform labs and classrooms could be a huge win for Apple. Educational IT staff will no longer need to choose between the typical Windows computers used in most businesses and the user- and kid-friendly Macs that were once so prevalent in schools. And for schools with an existing investment in Macs, this opens up new options of what can be taught to students of any age.
Boot Camp, released last week in a low-key manner by Apple, allows the company's latest Intel-based hardware to run Windows XP natively. The beta software is a free download and will be included in Apple's upcoming Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard operating system.
Opening the door to schools (and other organizations) to be able to buy a single computer that can run Mac OS X or Windows is only part of the advantage. Apple has pushed Mac OS X Server as a cross-platform network solution. Its Open Directory architecture can easily support Windows clients for both access to resources and for authentication by hosting a Windows domain. Moreover, Open Directorys power lies in that it can be used to enforce Mac OS Xs managed preferences and it can host Windows profiles, allowing some management of the Windows environment as well.
Open Directory also makes it painless to provide users with a single home directory in which to store files -- regardless of which platform they use. This directory is transparently available to Mac OS X network users, who may never even realize that their desktop and other folders are actually residing on a server. Although not as transparent on the Windows side, this directory is mapped automatically as a network drive and provides users access to the exact same storage space. This ease of network storage is actually a very useful feature for Boot Camp Macs because of the limitation of being able to see the Mac OS X partition (and all data stored on it) when the Mac is booted into Windows XP.
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