Separate names with a comma.
I actually thought I'd keep going until you finally say something useful. You're up.
That was thrown in for my own humor because you need humor in your life. I included the link too, so anyone reading it would see the entire...
I realize it's awkward, but have you tried suspending then archiving the .mem file for later recall? I don't know if this will work or destroy...
If you can make the guest file systems available for mounting to OS X with NFS, Samba, or what ever method you can, then any virus scanner can to...
Thanks, Tim - that I'm sure is pretty well understood. Val has been playing the role of net nanny of late and scurrying around the posts trying to...
What he said was to include that address for comments. Is that your only drum?
Tim Surgent from Parallels said via a postscript in another thread that he had been using 3120 for several days. So it is released at least...
Aren't you the little trouble maker ;) I'm going to laugh hard if this is just a marketing release for MacWorld :) But it does point out that the...
There has been no official announcement that I have seen. It appears to be a back door copy from the beta distro site. It's another process...
If anyone needed a strong clue that the beta process is off track you only need to read the Version 3116 thread here:...
If possible, open the system monitor and explore memory, cpu, and disk usage, make a note of what you see, or capture a screen shot, then reboot...
Suspending it does save it's state. In fact that's all suspending it does. 'Save State' could even be another name for Suspend.
You just uninstall beta 3 and install beta 2. Do be sure to preserve your version specific VM's, though. Don't leave them suspended between...
Good on you for recognizing the error!
There are two, sometimes three files that Parallels needs for your VM. They are found under your home directory in ./library/parallels/vmname...
Just be aware that 3106 has destroyed some people's systems resulting in the need for a full re-install. Your call, of course, but do be careful...
I dug into this a bit deeper and found this command line will in fact start Parallels and, if the VM is configured to autostart, then that will...
Agreed - I nearly fell out of my chair when I dragged my mouse out of a VMWare instance of Solaris 10 and it didn't stop at the window's edge....
Open a command line window in your VM and type in: ipconfig /all Then paste the results in back here.
If the card is truly used only by Windows then it will have it's own IP. If you can get Windows to act as a gateway between the Mac address space...