Thanks Steve,
I went to create a new VM last night, and thought at some point it might ask me if I wanted to use Boot Camp.
Do I need to use the Boot Camp assistant and set it up there first, then import into Parallels, or can Parallels guide me through the whole process?
If I use Parallels to create the VM that uses the Boot Camp partition as the drive, will I be able to access files on the Mac filesystem when booting directly into Windows (I'm assuming not), but that I will be able to access those files when running it as a VM using the Boot Camp Partition.
Is the following correct?
I will get the ability to either boot into Windows natively (losing access to the Mac files), or run the VM up whilst in Mac OS (And still have access to the Mac files).
If running the VM using the Boot Camp partition, I guess you lose the ability to map the documents folder, music folder etc. And any files in Windows will need to be backed up seperately to the Mac files?
Will I lose these benefits?
The biggest advantage for me of Parallels VM is that when in Windows I can save to 'My Documents' etc as I usually would, but if I decided to delete the VM and create a new one, I won't actually have to worry about backing up those Windows files seperately, as they are actually on a partition of the Mac HDD, so are included in usual Time Machine backups anyway.
If I use Parallels with Boot Camp and save files to 'My Documents' in windows, i'll need to backup these Windows files somewhere, say using the backup tools in Windows
Last edited: Aug 15, 2012