Much love for Mike Bombich -- Bootpicker 1.3 makes Mac/XP choice easier

Let us count the ways that the Mac sysadmin community hearts Mike B: we relish his reliable and full-featured Carbon Copy Cloner, we depend absolutely upon his fast and simple NetRestore, we puzzle through his instructions for deploying dual-boot machines and for working with Active Directory. Most of all, we love that all this snazzy management goodness is free. Now, for everyone tired of telling dual-boot users "just hold down the option key," Mike has released a Boot Camp OS selector tool called (unsurprisingly) BootPicker. It's open source, free and delightfully slick.
What differentiates BootPicker from a simple option-boot, or from more elaborate tools like rEFIt, is its manageability and simplicity. Installed as a preference pane, BootPicker actually boots to Mac OS X every time and lets the user click a button for the OS they want (or, if administratively desired, reboots automatically to Mac OS X or Windows without user input). This gets around a couple of tricky problems; normally, setting a permanent boot OS requires an admin password, and a machine set to always boot in Windows is immune to the management oversight of tools like ARD or Workgroup Manager (you can manage both sides of the fence with LANrev or similar tools, but that can be a pain). By booting into Mac OS X first, there's an opportunity to change the preferences for BootPicker itself and modify the behavior for the next boot cycle.
There's a very solid Read Me for BootPicker that (unfortunately) is only included in the install distribution, so you'll have to download it to peruse the details. Mike includes a candid evaluation of the security risks involved with something like BootPicker, which runs as root before the normal login window is presented to the user; please use discretion and care if you decide to deploy it. Check it out, and take a moment to appreciate what Mr. Bombich has done to make our lives a little bit easier.
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Let us count the ways that the Mac sysadmin community hearts Mike B: we relish his reliable and full-featured Carbon Copy Cloner, we depend...
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#11 -- thanks for the links, Jeremy! One distinction for BootPicker is that it does NOT require authentication as an admin user to select another boot OS, an important feature in lab/edu environments.
#12 -- I believe you can replace the graphics.
Is it skinnable? I'd like to replace that Windows desktop shot with the BSOD
July 31 2007 at 5:20 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyThere's a few other utilities for this out now, including one by myself (shameless plug)
My simple app (allows any OS drive choosing):
http://buttered-cat.com/products/view/QuickBoot
Or you can setup a simple one shot script for use with QuickSilver or by itself:
http://www.macinstruct.com/node/129
I have been deploying this around and it works great. Very easy to customize to put your own images in there, remove the background, ect. Dig around in the forums, and some people even have made a prefrence pane to configure it!
July 31 2007 at 12:55 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply#8 -- I don't care who knows it... I want EVERYONE to know how I feel. :-)
July 31 2007 at 12:30 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyMaybe next time the gushing about how awesome Mike Bombich is could be directed to a personal email to him, leaving the actual news for the TUAW readers? :p
July 31 2007 at 12:22 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down Reply#3 -- You can set up BootPicker in logout hook mode so that it will ask you for your OS choice whenever you log out. Download it and read the documentation.
July 31 2007 at 12:10 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplySeveral people commented on the "lack of availability" of the ReadMe (previously displayed only during installation), so I decided to make it easily available in the Preference Pane as well :-) It's there, check it out! And thanks for the kudos!
July 31 2007 at 12:09 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyI wondered who had done this...Arizona State University has been installing this on all of the Intel iMacs that are popping up on campus. Props to Mike.
July 31 2007 at 12:03 PM Report abuse Permalink rate up rate down ReplyIs there a simple tool that allows you to reboot in Windows from OSX? Something like "Reboot in Windows" so you don't have to hold alt at startup? You can always change the startup disk but it is not as straightforward.
Thanks!
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