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rcomeau: I write software, and I know where you're coming from. :) I just personally have no real need for USB support in Parallels, so it's...
I finally figured out that it's actually faster to shut down and boot Windows XP than it is to suspend and resume it in Parallels. Plus Parallels...
I generally don't get the point to having web cam support in Parallels, when you could simply use it from the Mac side. Are there really that...
Well, Windows will only run on one core, but that leaves the other core free for the video handling and so forth, as well as your other apps....
I think Parallels Tools only work with Windows 2000 and up.
I guess I don't feel that strongly about this since PD is working perfectly for me. :)
My feeling is that right now, Parallels is mostly engineers, and I'm betting that after shipping 2.1 for Mac, they all took a much-deserved vacation.
I think they can be fully successful on their own.
The virtualization only uses one of the two cores. However, actually, XP Home runs fine on a dual-core machine -- it will just only use one core.
I use my IP printer by just putting "http://<ip address here>" as the URL for the printer when adding the printer in XP. Works fine.
I'm using QuickBooks 2004 without any problems; I never saw a need to upgrade to 2005 or later; they keep taking away features I rely on instead...
My boot time is fast enough that I can start it up, look away, and be startled by the Windows startup chime because it always happens a lot sooner...
I agree that the time limit on the X-Plane demo is pretty ridiculously low. :)
Should work fine. I've not done it myself, but what I understand is if you copy the entire VM folder over, it should work on the other machine.
It probably won't work in Parallels, but you could try X-Plane, which has a Mac version and is generally considered one of the best flight...
Well, that 40% is actually 80% of one CPU core, and since the virtualization can only use one core, that's not too bad.
If the question is "How can I mount the .hdd image on the Mac so I can use it from there?", I'm not sure. I get the impression that the .hdd file...
Well, Parallels uses only one CPU for running the code that's running inside the VM, but the other core will be getting used for anything else...
Short answer: Yes. Long answer: Heck yes. Explanative answer: Macs tend to come with only enough memory for very basic use. I generally...
The *.hdd file is the disk image used for the VM, and contains all the disk data.