There is always the potential that Parallels Desktop - - software that allows you to create multiple virtual machines each with its own OS on Intel Macs - - with little overhead due to the virtualization capabilities built in to the new Intel chips - - will have evolved to make it possible to run MIR on a Mac running Windows and OSX simultaneously. (But you will have to install Windows on your Mac for this or for Boot Camp. Boot Camp, however, forces you to choose between Windows and MacOS, Parallels Desktop does not.)
Right now, Parallels Desktop allows Intel Macs to run OSX, various versions of Windows and various iterationns of Linux simultaneously - - so that you can copy and paste between programs running in diferent operating systems. I have actually seen an Intel Mac running 4 different operating systems (and programs in each) simultaneously.
It is also rumored that something that has capabilities similar to those of Parallels Desktop will be built into MacOS 10.5 ("Leopard") and it has been announced that Leopard will be a true 64 bit system but will run 32 bit apps without the apps having to undergo modification. So you have the possibility of machines with 8 processor cores able to access vast amounts of RAM and able to run multiple operating systems simultaneously. In other words, something close to a "one box" solution may be closer to reality than it has ever been.
BTW Intel Macs are not slouches when running Windows. A friend who is an IT manager at a design firm tested a MacBook Pro running Windows under Boot Camp and found it, very much to his surprise, measurably - - if not significantly - - faster than a new 4 processor core Windows native machine when both machines were performing certain of the same tasks in Photoshop.
If none of the above turns out to work, one could always buy a relatively inexpensive Windows machine - - or, if Boot Camp works for this purpose, a Mac Mini - - and dedicate it to MIR.
Right now, Parallels Desktop allows Intel Macs to run OSX, various versions of Windows and various iterationns of Linux simultaneously - - so that you can copy and paste between programs running in diferent operating systems. I have actually seen an Intel Mac running 4 different operating systems (and programs in each) simultaneously.
It is also rumored that something that has capabilities similar to those of Parallels Desktop will be built into MacOS 10.5 ("Leopard") and it has been announced that Leopard will be a true 64 bit system but will run 32 bit apps without the apps having to undergo modification. So you have the possibility of machines with 8 processor cores able to access vast amounts of RAM and able to run multiple operating systems simultaneously. In other words, something close to a "one box" solution may be closer to reality than it has ever been.
BTW Intel Macs are not slouches when running Windows. A friend who is an IT manager at a design firm tested a MacBook Pro running Windows under Boot Camp and found it, very much to his surprise, measurably - - if not significantly - - faster than a new 4 processor core Windows native machine when both machines were performing certain of the same tasks in Photoshop.
If none of the above turns out to work, one could always buy a relatively inexpensive Windows machine - - or, if Boot Camp works for this purpose, a Mac Mini - - and dedicate it to MIR.