Separate names with a comma.
There's really no difference between the OS on raw hardware vs VM beyond inability to change the hardware. The advantage of using VM is that you...
With v16-v18, I remember seeing betas as early as late spring. Unless they only did that due to the transition to ARM?
What I was talking about was doing it on the Guest OS. Now, I've yet to Try on Win10 / Win11, but with the more classic menu in Windows, you can...
This is what I use to get what I need for Parallels to setup a VM: How-To Via Terminal: https://osxdaily.com/where-download-macos-installers/...
Was there no beta this year? I don't recall seeing it mentioned.
If it helps, I'm running Win11 Pro (direct install from MSFT ISO) on my 2019 MBP using the standard desktop version of Parallels 17. I tested 18...
You're only able to install OSes that natively run on the same platform. Since Silicone Macs run on an ARM design, you'd have to use an ARM based OS.
This is a license limitation? I thought it was a hardware limitation of the platform?
Not sure Why you'd still need the ISO, but the easiest way to get it is directly from MSFT's downloads page.
So long as you remember to add the TPM module in setup using Parallels 17 or use Parallels 18 (which comes with a Win11 VM), then IDK why it...
You'll have to manually connect any of the old vHDD files to a new VM in order to retrieve the files inside. You won't be able to load the...
If you can't get the AppleID logged in, then I don't think that is possible without simply downloading the correct installer manually, but that's...
I imagine you do that on the Guest side, similar to editing the root start menu back in the pre-Win8 days.
Cool, if someone's basically already tested things (I kind of expect all major companies to already be coding for M series by now), then that'll...
Oddly enough, I'm not sure if it's Parallels or not, but then again, it's possible that Parallels has messed with my Bootcamp install as well...
You'll never be able to migrate an Intel based installation to an ARM / M-Series based platform. Sure, you can create a Win11 ARM VM in parallels...
You mean I'm not the Only one that gets bored? I've got basically every major OS I can play with in v17 (something you Can't do on an M series...
Can you not simply point the VM's installer (mid-installation process) to a Time Machine backup? Even if you have to do it as a manual installation?
To clarify, the boundaries of the Core hardware (CPU Core Count / RAM capacity installed)
I'm not sure what server class options there are with Parallels, but that'd be part of the Business class license if anything, so I'd suggest...