What is equivalent for missing keys on MAC vc PC?

I am switching from PC to MacBook Pro
Some keys on a PC keyboard do not exist on the macbook, so I am wondering what the keyboard equivalent is? I would like to know the equivalent under mac OS x and under Parallels VS running wind xp,
Keys missing:
Page Up, Page Down
Home, End
Insert, Delete (i.e. delete the next character forward; the delete key on the mac seem to be the same as a PC backspace key)
Print Screen (and alt print screen to print focus window only)
Thanks
Bob

If buying a new keyboard won't break the bank, Logitech makes a few cross platform keyboards that have all the keys you'd expect to find as a Mac OS user and/or as a Windows user on the same keyboard.
Here's a link to their Wave Keyboard:
http://www.logitech.com/index.cfm/keyboards/keyboard/devices/3071&cl=us,en
They make a few other models for both Mac and Windows. Just follow the "keyboard" link on their web site and browse for ones with both the Windows and Mac icons.
-Warren

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    Anyone...anyone? Bueller...Bueller?

  • What is the best app for backing up my mac. I do publication work and need to save my work?

    what is the best app for backing up my mac. I do publication work and need to save my work?

    My answer does not have the black Apple logo but the hardearned black belt of (bad) experience.
    There is one problem with TimeMachine. It can get corrupted out of the blue with no warning and it will not want to restore correctly (as an added "bonus" you get to find this out the "hard" way, when you need it most). Plus it takes ages for the data to be copied back, sometimes days. Haven't tried my 600gb backup on Mavericks but Mountain Lion had this knack of breaking Timemachine after a couple of months.
    To back up my entire server is use SuperDuper. It mirrors the drive to an external one (usb for example) The cool thing is you can use that usb drive and start the OS X from it (by holding Alt when you hear the boot chime).
    This way you have a working copy of your entire machine. You can even go to another mac and boot it from there. I literally ran the OS X Server in my company from a usb drive on an old MacBook Pro until i got around to fix the problems with the actual server machine.
    This has saved me twice already as the Hitachi drives Apple uses, tend to die like clockwork after 4000-5000 hours of use with no warning.
    http://www.shirt-pocket.com/SuperDuper/SuperDuperDescription.html
    PS. As a sidenote... SSDs are more reliable than a normal HDD (not to mention faster) I can't stress this enough, my Server is on two SSDs now. I can't tell you how stress free the setup is, it doesn't feel like a computer but more like a router, it just works... forever. After two years with SSDs my server has had two days of downtime and their health is at 97%, they will literally last 100 years with normal use. I'd go so far as to recommend you buy an SSD and move your old HDD to an external enclosure and use that as a usb backup. (for SSDs i use Plextor / Lite-On M3s (older) or the M6s (newer))

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