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GJAozora Bank is preparing for an IPO of shares, and has asked Apple to deploy 2,500 Macs across its main office, data centre, and 17 branches. The bank has instantly become Apple's biggest financial industry client in the world, Reuters reports.
"The question for us was how to simplify the environment and bring it forward 15 years in one jump," said Bill Chute, Aozora's chief technology officer and a former tech executive at Citibank, according to the report.
Apple has continued to attract new interest from firms that would never have touched the platform in the days of Mac OS 9, the report explains, and the move to support Windows on Macs seems set to attract more.
Brian Croll, a senior marketing director at Apple, told Reuters that the move to OS X attracted new customers that Apple has never seen before: "We're dealing with government agencies, science and technology firms, even trucking companies," he said.
GuyJean wrote:Japanese Bank Switches to Mac
http://www.macworld.co.uk/news/index.cfm?RSS&NewsID=14327
GJ
Doh! Once again, Taro reigns supreme.. Looks like I have to spend more time on FG to keep up.Mulboyne wrote:Is that related to Taro's thread Aozora Bank joins the pod people & mac-heads? Don't try and play the "busy at work" card.
I think the beta if free.. http://www.parallels.com/Shows Windows XP booting in 10 seconds on a 2.0 GHz MacBook Pro using software from Parallels.
What is Virtualization?
There are many different meanings of the term virtual machine, but for our purpose, it is a piece of software that allows a user to run multiple guest operating systems within the main host operating system. That is, you may run instances of Windows XP, Red Hat Linux and FreeBSD that would, to the user, appear to be individual applications inside your host Mac OS X. For a slightly more technical overview, here is a recent article on virtualization.
There have been multiple solutions for achieving this on many platforms for years now. Only recently, however, has it become more feasible, more seamless and, most importantly, gained support among operating system developers. Microsoft, many Linux distributions and, as rumored, Apple are taking notice and are rolling out more solutions to co-exist.
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