VMware Workstation Pro works by creating fully isolated, secure virtual machines that encapsulate an operating system and its applications. The VMware virtualization layer maps the physical hardware resources to the virtual machine's resources, so each virtual machine has its own CPU, memory, disks, and I/O devices, and is the full equivalent of a standard x86 machine. VMware Workstation Pro installs onto the host operating system and provides broad hardware support by inheriting device support from the host.

IMPORTANT: When you install a new version of Workstation, the previous version will be uninstalled from your system. Therefore, we recommend that you proceed with the upgrade only if you have a new license key. Your existing virtual machines will not be affected.


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Windows Virtual PC is the latest Microsoft virtualization technology. It lets you run many productivity applications in a virtual Windows environment, with a single click, directly from a Windows 7-based computer.


Supported host operating systems

As Virtualbox emulates virtual hardware, any hardware referencesinvolves two calls: One to the virtual hardware driver, then byVirtualbox to the real Windows driver.For this reason Virtualbox cannot do goodpass-through access to the real hardware.

On the other hand, Hyper-V Generation 2 virtual machines employdrivers that are only thin wrappers on the real hardware,so with better performance.For this reason, Hyper-V can do much better pass-through of realhardware (if required).

Parallels Desktop 19 is optimized for macOS Sonoma, offering enhanced printing options through the Internet Printing Protocol (IPP). This optimization provides a more immersive experience when running macOS virtual machines on Mac computers with Apple silicon, including improved shared printing on those devices.

If you have already installed Windows 10, Windows 8.1, Windows 8, or Windows 7 on your Mac using Boot Camp, you can set Parallels Desktop to run Windows from the Boot Camp Partition or import Windows and your data from Boot Camp into Parallels Desktop as a new virtual machine.

Parallels offers exclusive discounts for students currently enrolled in a qualified institution or professional educators who are currently employed at a qualified institution. Educational discounts can save users up to 50%. Start by verifying eligibility.

Good news, the base virtual hard disk "Windows XP Professional.vmdk" still exist on the old computer and you'll need to copy it to the new one and place it inside the Virtual Machine Document Package with the other files that comprise the Virtual Machine.

Unable to open file "/Users/pkitani/Documents/Virtual Machines.localized/Windows XP Professional.vmwarevm/Windows XP Professional-000006.vmdk": One of the disks in this virtual machine is already in use by a virtual machine or by a snapshot.

The Virtual Machine is configured to use a 20 GB monolithicSparse virtual hard disk and has 8 Snapshots giving the Virtual Machine Document Package a size of over 50 GB and without the Snapshots it would be ~ 20 GB or less. In addition to the overall size having a large number of Snapshots decreases the overall performance of the Virtual Machine and makes it easier to become broken because of the number of files being managed and needed to make the Virtual Machine work normally.

Now if you choose to delete the Snapshots there are several ways to go about this and because of the number and size of the Snapshots and type of virtual hard disk (monolithicSparse vs. twoGbMaxExtentSparse) personally I'd not use the normal route of using the Snapshot Manager and instead use vmware-vdiskmanager to create a new .vmdk (virtual hard disk) and then either swap it out for all the others in the Virtual Machine or just create a new Virtual Machine using it. The Snapshot Manager is in some ways the easier but longer route to take to consolidate all of the Snapshots Disks into the Base Disk however using vmware-vdiskmanager requires using Terminal and long command lines with several parameters and then additional steps to use the newly created .vmdk. There are some orther ways as well however under the circumstances using either the Snapshot Manager or vmware-vdiskmanager are the more appropraite methods at this place in time.

Note: Both the shell script or the command line will create a twoGbMaxExtentSparse or split in 2 GB segments .vmdk file which is a different type then the original and if you'd rather keep it as a monolithicSparse or single .vmdk file for the Virtual Machine's virtual hard drive, which is how the current Virtual Machine is configured, then you'll need to change the "t 1" to "t 0" in either the command line or in the shell script depending on which method you choose to use. Based on our conversation on what you use the Virtual Machine for then switching to the twoGbMaxExtentSparse or split in 2 GB segments .vmdk file will be okay and no need to change it unless you really want to for some reason.

Although I forgot to mention it when we talked nonetheless there is still one more housekeeping chore to do before backing up the new Virtual Machine to the Time Capsule as we discussed. This next step will further reduce the amount of Host disk space that the virtual hard disk take up. Using VMware Tools from within Windows you'll shrinking the C: Drive. You can access VMware Tools from Windows Control Panel or from the System Notification Area of the Windows Taskbar, by the clock. Once you have shrunk the disk you can then reboot the Virtual Machine to make sure all is well and then shutdown from within Windows and close VMware Fusion in order to make the backup copy of the Virtual Machine Document Package to the Time Capsule as we discussed.

Just wanted to let you know I was able to complete this tonight, including the shrink disk via VM Tools. It seemed to go smoothly and my virtual machine seems to be intact. I am keeping the copy of my VM before I did this and storing it on my Time Capsule just to be safe, then will delete it after I'm sure everything is ok.

I'm also planning to back-up the virtual machine file to my TC as you suggested just in case anything should happen to my hard drive and I need to restore rather than using my Time Machine as a backup and am using the Ethernet cable rather than doing it over wireless as you recommended.

I'm trying to use Dropbox in a "Windows 11 Pro" virtual machine (under Parallels) on Macbook M1 (Apple silicon). When I attempt to install, I get an error message "Couldn't start Dropbox. Your device is not compatible with this version of the Dropbox app." It states that I could use Windows 11 in S mode, but I can't be restricted to S mode.

Welcome to the forum. I wish I could tell you of some profound insight or clever work-around. Right now I just use USB drives to update the Mac virtual Windows machine. It's clumsy but it does work. I continue to look for something better, but that's it for now.

Copilot is designed to benefit everyone in an organization. From senior leaders to IT professionals to frontline workers, Copilot offers features that streamline tasks, automate workflows, and enhance collaboration unlocking productivity and creativity throughout your day. Its adaptability means that it can be customized to meet the unique needs of any organization. The ability to extend its capabilities through plugins makes it a continually evolving asset that can adapt to the ever-changing landscape of business needs.

tsc: Fast TSC calibration failedI understand this to be some time dependent sync that has to happen at boot time or such failure occurs. I bought a WD 1TB SSD on a Thunderbolt dock to speed up the run/boot time of the virtual. (it was on my platter RAID cage before) to no avail. No diff.

Parallels IS set to 'enable nested virtualization' and I have started a virtual in Hyper-V on the win 10 Pro VM just fine, no errors. I have checked and unchecked 'PMU Virtualization' which I understand will provide statistics to the host but slow the VM.

I am running a host with a AMD 4 core processor. I tried to allocate 3 cores to my Windows VM but it only sees or recognizes 2 per System Monitor. Has anyone been able to get Windows 10 to utilize more than 2 cores? Even on different virtualization? Specs/config please. Could it have something to do with my host having 4 cores?

In order to improve the performance of your virtual machine, you can use a processor with more cores. Most hypervisors can provide vCPUs as processors, processor cores or even threads. It means that instead of 8 vCPUs, you can add 2 vCPUs (2 sockets) with 4 per socket.

In KVM Hypervisor running Windows 10 VM, all assigned virtual cores are considered as separate processors. To use all CPU resources allocated to a Virtual Machine, it must see one 8 core processor (or 2 in Professional).

So I couldn't resist and I bought this MacBook Pro (2020) with M1 chip. I downloaded virtual windows from parallels. Everything worked well and I downloaded Autocad, Revit and Robot Structural Analysis 2022. I tested all three of them and everything worked perfectly. After a week I tried to open the robot again and it didn't start. The program's yellow themed starting picuters pop ups, but after that nothing happens.. Autocad and Revit still works perfectly and I don't have any issues with them. I have uninstalled and reinstalled the robot several times, but it's always the same problem. Also I tried to install earlier versions of robot but it was always the same problem. I'm hopeless do anyone have some kind of clue what shall I do or is there anything to do at all.

With the M1 chips, I believe we're pretty much stuck with the possibility of running this software through a virtual machine, so I'm also wondering if anyone at Autodesk can help us out with this. As Apple moves towards using its own silicon in the future, a whole lot of users like us will have the same issue. 0852c4b9a8

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