Separate names with a comma.
If you are looking for something like an nVidia control Panel, there isn't any. Only the "Appearance and Personalization" tools that come in...
Click on "Technical Support" at the top of your Account page, you are taken to a page that has, among other things, your support code written in red.
*sigh* Not kat's instructions, those were meant only to see if you are and Administrator or not. The link I posted.
In a virtualized environment, like PDM, the graphics card is virtualized, Windows doesn't have direct access to it, or direct control, remember...
But I assume it's solved, since it's not much different the instructions for Windows 8 than it is for 7.
*sigh* Virtual Machine's Configure > Options > Applications > "Share Mac applications with Windows" and "Email: Open in Mac"
Restore Defaults? Did you happen to go into Parallels > Preferences > Advanced > Shared and changed from 10.211.55.x to 192.168.1.x (or whatever...
Like I said, the most likely way to solve the situation is to recreate the virtual com port, that virtual com port is created by the CNC drivers.
On a shared network VMs are on a subnet of the Mac. Use bridged network and they will all be at the same subnet as are all other physical LAN...
Have you tried to reinstall Parallels Tools and reinstall the CNC specific drivers (I'm guessing it's a virtual serial encapsulated over USB)?
See if this might help: http://www.sevenforums.com/tutorials/11841-run-administrator.html
You should update, if you want to keep the Windows environment safe.
Clone. Snapshots are useful for rolling back to a previous state, they work in a linear way, it's a sort of Time Machine, where you can roll back...
Yes, they would all be separate Virtual Machines.
You're not my customer. Please read the last line in my signature. You don't take into account that the user never mentioned what version of...
It's not a question of going back to the original hardware, SysPrep is used to clone machines with the SAME hardware. You have no experience in...
In simpler terms, if you simply clone with no SysPrep or restore to a different hardware, you are welcomed with a bluescreen when you boot Windows.
Are you saying this because you have actually done this, or are you presuming it works the way you are imagining? Because I've done this myself....
Not that simple. Like I said, Windows doesn't like to change hardware and this is not just in terms o licensing.
I still think it might be hardware, the disk itself, do you get crashes on Windows when booting natively in bootcamp?