

- #PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON FULL#
- #PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON WINDOWS 10#
- #PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON CODE#
- #PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON PC#
I’ve not tried to run any 圆4 apps yet-indeed, so far I’ve only upgraded to the new Microsoft Edge-but I’ve signed-in with my Microsoft account to get a few customizations going and will look at installing apps today.
#PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON PC#
While I will immediately dismiss any nonsense about a virtual version of WOA running faster than on native PC maker hardware, performance is nonetheless excellent and feels very similar to the experience of using Parallels with Windows on an Intel-based Mac.
#PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON FULL#
You can also resize the Windows VM window arbitrarily (as you can on Chrome OS) and run it full screen (ditto). This means you can just use the Mac normally and then run Windows apps-which can be searched for just like Mac apps and pinned in the Dock-normally. Unlike on Chrome OS, where you can only run Windows VMs in a window, the M1-based version already supports advanced features like Coherence. Since I’m familiar with Parallels, I’m impressed by what I see here.
#PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON CODE#
In any event, after adding the WOA VM to Parallels and activating the technical preview (using a code that Parallels provides when you sign-up), Parallels configures the environment and then boots into WOA for the first time. I credit both Apple, for its high-quality M1 transition, and Parallels, for its own engineering, for this.
#PARALLELS FOR MAC AMAZON WINDOWS 10#
And as it turns out, there is one way to use Parallels Desktop on an M1-based Mac with Windows: You can download an Insider Preview version of Windows 10 on ARM (WOA).ĭespite this being an early preview, things work as expected, assuming you’re familiar with Parallels Desktop, and aside from the Windows Insider requirement, the whole thing already seems really polished. But what we’re really interested in, of course, is Windows. Yeah, that’s a pretty small field of choices, and I can only imagine the issues people would have trying to run an ARM-based version of Linux right now in the technical preview. Instead, it can only run ARM-based virtual machines (VMs). Most notably, you can not use it to run x86/圆4-based versions of Windows (or Linux, or whatever) at the moment. And I use virtualization to capture screenshots of Windows during Setup for the Windows 10 Field Guide.Īnyway, the Parallels Desktop technical preview release for M1-based Macs is an early look at the work that Parallels is doing to adapt to Apple’s new architecture. They’re used in help desk and support scenarios.

In addition to running Windows productivity apps, developers use virtualization to test native and web apps on other platforms and browsers. (It’s supposed to come to Chrome OS in the future as well.)īut there are lots of other reasons why one might want to use a virtualization solution on whatever platform. Coherence is a big reason why I prefer Parallels over other Mac-based virtualization solutions. This lets you run those Windows apps side-by-side under macOS, as if they were native apps, and not in an OS/desktop window that is visually isolated from the rest of the system. But one key benefit of Parallels, at least for those using virtualization to solve that “last mile” problem of running one or a handful of key Windows applications, is its Coherence feature. There are pros and cons to both approaches, of course. But some are traditional client-installed virtualization solutions like Parallels Desktop, which is starting to make its way to Chrome OS now in addition to the Mac. Some are cloud-based, like Microsoft’s coming Cloud PC offering. We’ll get to that.Īnd with the shift away from Windows as the center of personal computing, we’re starting to see more solutions for running Windows applications on new platforms, many of which are mobile. In the near future, it’s Windows (and presumably Linux) on Apple Silicon (M1).

Back in the day, that meant emulating Intel-based (x86) Windows on PowerPC-based Macs. I used Connectix Virtual PC, which was later purchased by Microsoft, back in the early days of OS X almost 20 years ago before moving on to more modern solutions like VMWare Fusion and then Parallels Desktop.Īnd anytime there’s a processor architecture change, these things get even more interesting. Virtualization has long been important on the Mac, primarily because of the app gap, a situation that is a lot less problematic today. Aside from the usual product updates, the big news this year was that Parallels had been featured in Apple’s M1 chipset reveal, and I was quite curious to know what that would look like.īut there’s a rich history to consider here. I met (wait for it, virtually) with Parallels ahead of the launch of Parallels Desktop 16 this past fall, and before Apple shipped macOS Big Sur.
