It's going to actually be DX9, then DX11 sometime after launch.
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It's going to actually be DX9, then DX11 sometime after launch.
No, there's no emulation of anything. Boot camp is just a tool to help assisting in creating a bootable windows partition from MacOS X. That's it. There's nothing unique about PCs that allow Windows to boot. Nor is there anything unique about Macs that prevent Windows from booting. It's like installing Linux on a PC with Windows already installed.
Depends on various things.. Windows prior to Vista doesn't support booting on EFI hardware, and starting with Vista supports booting on UEFI hardware. Not all Macs have the latest UEFI, but older EFI, in which case there needs to be a BIOS emulation for Windows to install.
Thanks for your advice but I live in a very small apartment in Japan. The compactness of the iMac (so thin, only 1 wire) as well as being able to blend as a furniture in my living room are major factors for me :)
If I buy a PC, i would most likely put it into a game/study room and I will lose a spare bedroom :p
imac is just a repackaged laptop.
apple just marks up the price of anything and gives you the worst version of unix.
get a PC if you want games on it.
I had a look on the apple store at iMacs £160 for an extra 8GB RAM? it's daylight robbery what is it iRAM?
I just checked that myself. It says +$200 for the extra 8GB of RAM for the 27" iMac on my end (and six hundred dollars for 32GB of RAM - a high performance 32GB kit costs about $200). Aaaaand +$200 to go from an i5 to an i7 (the difference is $90 between the two).