- beta software: BootCamp, Parallels, and VMware Fusion (all ways to put Windows on a Mac) are in beta. Beta software, by definition, is incomplete, potentially unstable, and not ready for full release.
- minimum required hardware configurations: many schools promulgate such requirements, and may not be interested in adapting them for Mac hardware
Funny you should post that. Someone else just responded to almost all of these other "concerns":http://maclawstudents.com/blog/speculation/boot-camp-and-cheating/
1. ... There just aren’t that many variables that can go wrong with a boot loader.
2. “ExamSoft...
3. ...any PC that meets the basic requirements to run SofTest will be allowed...
4. “Hardware vendors aren’t generally in the business...
5. “Because the state bar arbitrarily constrains exam takers, we’ll do the same thing.” Should students be restricted for three years because restrictions are placed on them for a few hours at the end of that three year period?
I think you fail to understand what dual booting is. Once the mac is in windows, it is no longer running boot camp. The ONLY time it could fail is in getting windows to start booting in the first place. If there any problems with windows on a mac, it is ONLY because of issues with mac motherboards (or any integrated hardware that is on them).
Mac hardware is not functionally different anymore. The minimum hardware requirements would apply exactly the same. Even then, min hardware requirements are mostly a joke. Any computer you can buy new today has easily quadruple the computing power a law student needs.
The real answer here is to treat people like adults and not use any kind of exam software. If your hardware fails, then have a paper/pen or loaner backup strategy, but ... treat people like adults.
A school specifiying that laptops that computers have wireless cards only with specific chipsets is just moronic. Support one of the standards (b/g/a whatever) and let it be. I am skeptical of that level of specificity; it makes me wonder if the school gets a kickback on purchases of their "recommended configuration, direct from this link to our 'preferred vendor'"
You say that Apple's require non certified drivers, but many PCs ship with uncertified drivers as well. This is neither unique nor different. The fact of the matter is, a Mac booted into Windows XP Pro from Boot Camp is no different than a generic PC booted into Windows XP Pro. That the initial boot comes from EFI and not BIOS plays no role in any of the software running in the OS.
Banning Macs from law schools/law school exams is merely lazy.