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Alexis Glick is an anchor for FOX Business Network. Prior to joining FOX, Glick served as a correspondent for the Today Show and co-anchored the third hour of that program. Before her stint at NBC News, she was the senior trading correspondent for CNBC and reported from the floor of the New York Stock Exchange.
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Alexandra Napoleon
Apple and Microsoft are not competitors. Microsoft is a software company. Apple is... well it is hard to describe exactly what Apple is, but Apple determines what the public wants and sells it to them. It is fun to consider them rivals, but I do not think that is what the scenario really is.
Art
I think you have Spaces confused with Virtualization software such as Parallels. Parallels allows you to run Windows (or Linux), side-by-side with Mac OS X, without rebooting. Spaces is a feature in Mac OS X that allows you to group your Application windows however you wish and switch between them effortlessly. I love this rivalry and hope to see future coverage on Fox News! You should try interviewing Steve Jobs. He's can be a handful.
elgarak
1) Microsoft and Apple are generally not competitors. Microsoft sells software, Apple sells computers. They compete with some products, but not in their core segments (Mac OS X is not sold to be run on non-Apple computer. 2) Mr. Hesseldahl mentions that 3rd party software is needed to run Windows on a Mac. This statement is not complete; 3rd party virtualization software is needed to run Mac OS X and Windows applications side-by-side, but Apple ships tools and utilities to dual-boot with Windows (with only one OS running at each time). 3) Both in the video and in the summary you suggest that Spaces does allow to run Windows applications side-by-side with Mac OS X applications. This is wrong. Spaces allows to use multiple (logical) desktops. Spaces is not a virtualization software, and does not allow the usage of Windows. It does make virtualization software user-friendlier, and easier to use, though.