The Talk Show: Live From WWDC
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Linked List: April 10, 2006

Parallels Workstation 2.1 Beta 2 

Updated beta of Parallels’s virtualization program for Mac OS X — and they’ve cut the price from $50 to $40.

Boycott Walgreens 

Here’s a boycott I can get behind.

Macworld Round Table: Assessing Boot Camp 

Jason Snell on the idea that Boot Camp will hurt Mac developers:

Fundamentally, Mac users are Mac users because they want to use the Mac OS. And developers realize that if Mac users wanted to run Windows apps, they wouldn’t be Mac users.

Do I think that developers who are only tenuously attached to the Mac market, but don’t really get it, might try the “just use our app in Windows” approach? Sure. But most of those companies dropped out of the Mac market long ago.

Disney to Offer Some ABC Programs Free on the Web 

Webcasts of popular shows like “Lost” and “Desperate Housewives”, available on the web the day after they’re televised, supported by commercials.

Siracusa on Boot Camp 

Terrific essay from John Siracusa on Boot Camp, including this bit on the rampant fear that Boot Camp will lead to developers abandoning real Mac software development:

This naturally leads to the fear that Mac users will simply snub themselves out of the software market entirely by rejecting the supposedly inevitable “just boot Windows” crumbs offered to them. Here’s my favorite rebuttal of that scenario, from a comment on Seibold’s article page, by Dogger Blue. (Emphasis added.)

Consumers don’t compete for developers. It’s the other way around. Any developer who wants any significant presence among Mac users needs to release an OS X version. That is never going to change, and any developer who thinks that will change, might as well just write off all their Mac business because some other developer will come along and take advantage of the fact that they have just left the door wide open for competitors.

There is money to be made in the Mac software market. (Just ask Microsoft; Mac Office is incredibly profitable.) As long as the number of people with Apple hardware stays about the same, that’s not going to change. And if it increases, as seems likely given the removal of one more barrier to entry (“Can it run my Windows?”), the pool of Mac software money will only get bigger. Software makers are competing for that pool. They have to satisfy us.

Siracusa’s observations on what this means for Mac game development ring true as well.