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  > And if I need to do anything for Windows, I just use Boot Camp.
In my head I imagine 90% of Mac users that use Boot Camp just need it to play PC games. :) Then again, I suppose there's still really specific obscure software out there that is Windows only (or Win/IIS devs that prefer Mac hardware). Which reminds me, I wonder if I'll ever see 3ds Max on MacOS.


Given the high quality and low cost of VMWare Fusion, I tend to assume the same thing.


My reason to have Bootcamp is literally to get Elgato Game capture, used to capture the presenter's screen real time, support in OBS so that I can livestream a Bsides conference once a year. I use an old Canopus firewire SD video to live transcode the camcorder in that setup.

I tried to do this in Parallels, but it just didn't work. Turns out live video composition and broadcasting needs the bare metal.


I know for me the big take away for having bootcamp is PowerShell. I work in Office 365, so the modules aren't built to work with it yet, even though there is a working version of PowerShell. Other than that, a couple interactions with Active Directory always cause me problems, so it is easier to just have a Windows Installation hanging out.


The only reasons I've considered using Boot Camp is for MS Project and Visio.

There are reasonable substitutes for Visio now, but damn a MS Project substitute is needed (and no, that thing in LibreOffice doesn't really work).


MSProject -> Omniplan ?


Any serious CAD or simulation software is not easily available on MacOS.


You wouldn't game on a laptop anyway and you should build your own tower PC for anything serious (which limits you from using OSX).




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