crappingpegasus said:
Oh, you'll get no argument from me that gaming is better on the PC. This is why I dualboot my iMac with Win7.
that said, hardware is hardware. right now there is little to no difference between the guts of a 2009 MPB and a high-end 2009 Dell Laptop. What's different is the design and operating system - which creates issues for some users depending on what they want.(snip)
so to the OP, DualBoot, or run Virtualization - you'd be surprised how much you can get away with.
If OP hadn't excluded that route, I would have to second that notion. Thing is, you'd have to accept this route knowing well you'll end up with two OS's that will inevitably both crave for some of your attention, and you'd have to rethink your approach to the daily chaos that makes up your digital life. You'd have to collect and/or actually remember all your passwords, and you'd have to have a plan of where all your music/samples/files/data/love-letters are actually stored. This in itself is too much for what seems to be the majority of users already.
Another risk is this: After I first installed Bootcamp - way, way back - I ended up being one of those that actually did 'somewhat' hose their OS X installation. Long story short, I ended up preferring Windows as main OS on Apple portables. WinXP was jolly good fun, but Windows 7 is so darn efficient I only use OS X for specific tasks these days, because I just don't have enough personal time to tinker with all available OS's all the time... Win7 (and WinXP) are where it's at, OS X has some superb niche functionality and unique programs I wouldn't want to and can't miss, Linux pretty much all boiled down to Mint for me these days. If OS X were a bit... less OS X, it would probably be my Linux of choice.
Basically, if you intend to dual boot, you either do it right when you get a new machine, or make it your weekend project with very little sleep inbetween sessions of setting it up and shoving your personal data where you really want to end up having it... and you're still bound to make mistakes the first time around.
Oh, another thing: Have there ever been any of those "High Resolution Patches" for the early Fallout titles on Mac? I think not... all the patches I've seen come in .exe form... and playing those games in 640x480 makes my eyes bleed.