Next Mac OS X version, Leopard, to arrive next Spring – “Hasta la vista, Vista.”

This week at the Apple Worldwide Developer’s Conference in San Francisco, Jobs was laying heavily into Microsoft and their long awaited XP replacement, Windows Vista. The jokes kept coming, with huge billboard apps showing a large ‘X’ on a disk, and above it read ‘Redmond, we have a problem’, ‘Redmond, start your photocopiers’, ‘Mac OS X Leopard: Introducing Vista 2.0’, and ‘Hasta la vista, Vista’.

Major annoucements at the conference: Mac OS X Leopard will start shipping in Spring next year – news on the new feature list is slim – Jobs commented ‘We don’t want our friends to start their photocopiers any sooner than they have to’, so it sounds like they’re holding back for a while until Microsoft get’s Vista’s features finalized. More info here.

Also, big news in Apple hardware – the first Intel based Mac desktop is now available, the Mac Pro. The new machine is based on two Intel dual-core Xeon chips in a shiny metal case, similar in looks to the Mac G5 that came before it. Prices start at $2,199 for a pair of 2.0GHz chips and includes 1GB RAM, an Nvidia GeForce 7300GT video card, a 250GB HDD and a SuperDrive.

This looks like a beast of a machine – check out the latest info on the Apple site here.

Running XP on Intel Macs – BootCamp, Parallels or Wine?

For Mac users who need to run the occasional Windows app, you’ve got a couple of options now. Wine has long been available for Linux users to run some Windows apps on top of a Windows API compatibility layer – CodeWeavers have taken this and produced a commerical version called CrossOver, and CrossOver Mac for Mac OS X, which offers support for running Windows MS Office plus some other apps. It’s not shipping yet, but when it does it will be priced at $59.95 which is a good price if you desperately need MS Office on your Mac.

The other options offer fuller support since they allow you to run Windows directly on your Mac – BootCamp from Apple allows you to dual boot your Intel based Mac to either Mac OS X or XP. The other option which is interesting is Parallels, which is Vitualization software (like VMWare) and allows you to install and run XP as a guest OS ontop of a currently running Intel-based Mac OS X machine.

Reghardware.co.uk have a lengthy article covering both BootCamp and Parallels, and is worth a read if you’re considering these options.