They say the best blogging is about story-telling. So, let me tell   you  one of mine  how I came to write this post. First, some   background: I  run a Windows-free environment, and have for a long time. I   put in my  time with “Windoz” many years ago, and quickly left it   behind. I cant  even remember what version of the Mac OS I was using  when  that  happened, but it was several iterations ago, and I upgraded  through   all those OS upgrades, loving the enhancements every step of  the way.    There are many reasons I became an Apple fanboy, and have  happily   stayed that way  but the biggest of them all was simply ease  of use,   across the whole Mac experience, and the much lower hassle  factor all   around. I value my time. I don’t want to be a computer geek.  I just  want  to get stuff done. Mac fits the bill.
Today, thanks to the  amazing advances of the Apple OS over the years   and other Apple software  offerings, I dont have a single need to run a   Windows app on my Mac.  However, I realize many people do  they have a   work reason, perhaps,  to run Outlook, one of the Windows versions of   Microsoft Office, or  Internet Explorer, or other apps that just dont   (for some crazy reason)  yet have a Mac version. Ive been running the   same Mac version of MS  Office now for more than a decade; it works   fine. 
(So, I cant say I run a completely Microsoft-free   environment; just a Windows-free one.) I also realize there’s   another big universe of Mac users out there who  want to run Windows on   their machines: gamers. We’re not talking a work  reason here (I don’t   think!), but this is a big market. There are many  more games available   for the Windows platform than for Mac  though  that is changing   somewhat, since so many game apps are continually being  introduced for   the Mac iOS  that is, for the iPhone, iPod Touch, and  iPad. (And the   new “GameCenter” in Mac iOS 4.1, due next week, moves  Apple even   further into the games market.)
But why I am writing  about running Windows on a Mac when I dont   have a need myself, and I’m  certainly not a gamer? Well, before I tell   you about “CrossOver Mac,”  here’s why: I had a personal experience   recently helping my daughter.   Shes also a longtime Mac user, but she   needed to run a single Windows  app for her business, which was required   by a government agency she had  to deal with. So, I told her, sure,  I’d  help her figure out how she  could do that. I of course knew about  two  programs designed to do that,  called “Parallels” and “VMware  Fusion,”  either of which we could buy  (for about $80, I think).  And I  told her I  could help her get one of  those installed on her Macbook.  But we  really didn’t like the idea of  spending even that much money to  run one  little Windows app, maybe once a  month  plus a friend, Steve  Borsch,  told me Windows doesn’t really run all that  snappy with those  programs,  anyway.
But I was starting to think  about buying one of those programs when   another local friend, Gary Doan, said, “Wait, what  about Boot Camp?   That wont cost you anything.” Apple started bundling  that program with   OS 10.5 and now 10.6, and you just need the original  install disk to   fire that up. Yes, 
plus a bonafide version of  Windows, with an   install disk  and we would have had to buy that.  Cheapest I could   find: an OEM version of 32-bit Windows 7 for $110 at  our local Micro   Center (closest thing we have to Fry’s here in MN). You  can’t even buy   Windows XP anymore, I learned, so that was not a cheaper  option. That,   combined with an onerous 
14-page manual that  Apple said you   must print out and have by your side as you go through  the detailed   Boot Camp installation and configuration process, was  making me start   to think, screw this. Then I learned my daughter’s  Macbook only has a   half a gig of RAM, and would need at least 1G to run OS  10.6, which I   wanted to upgrade her to, and preferably 2G. That  would have cost me at   least another $60, even if I installed the memory  myself, which I   really didnt want to do. I thought, wait a minute,  were getting close   to $200 here  for something we really don’t want  to do! Plus untold   hours of my time screwing around to get it running.
Long  story short: I found a brand-new HP Mini netbook on sale for   $269 at  OfficeMax (thanks to a friend’s tip), and I had a $30 off   coupon! I told  her Id gladly pay for half of that. I figured I was   coming out way  ahead, considering I wouldnt have to invest any time at   all if we went  with this option.  Plus, she wanted a second computer   anyway, just for  email and web use on another floor of her house, and   the HP Mini came  with built-in wifi capability, so it was a pretty   cheap option for that.  Now, were both happy.
Which brings me to the subject of my  post: theres a much simpler way   to run Windows on an Intel Mac  and  it might just work for you.  I   wish Id have known about it a week or  two earlier, and I could have   saved even more time (and money).  Its a  product called 
CrossOver Mac,  from the playfully named 
CodeWeavers,   based in St. Paul, MN.