While Mac OS X Leopard was the focus of early in August, the event served as the backdrop for major moves in the platforms virtualization market. For a moment, three vendors were standing, but as the cheers of the Mac faithful at the keynote address faded, one took a dive. For ages the lone developer of Mac virtualization software, Microsoft unexpectedly announced that it would stop developing Virtual PC for Mac. This move coincided with VMwares entry into the Mac market and startup Parallel Software Internationals defense of its turf with an announcement of a major upgrade. Virtualization giant VMware announced that by the end of the year, it would jump into the ring with a beta that would be able to run Windows Vista. Parallels, a small company based in Herndon, Va., and less than a year old, announced that it would beat VMware to the punch and ship a Vista-ready, final release version of Parallels Desktop before VMware delivered its beta. /zimages/2/28571.gif At WWDC, however VMware had the goods, previewing pre-beta VMware code running Windows Vista Beta and AutoCAD on a Mac Book Pro.
The company said that the Linux and Windows versions of VMware formed the core of the Mac version. 'Vista 3D is something weve already done,' said Srinivas Krishnamurti, director of product management for Palo Alto, Calif.-based VMware. 'Weve been running Vista since April of 2005.' The vendors both promised a capability that has been mostly missing with the older Virtual PC for Mac: full support for USB 2.0, a standard feature of Macs.
Jan 31, 2018 - You can use Windows on your Mac without having to partition your hard drive with VMWare's Fusion 10.
VMware and Parallels promised support in future releases. However, VMware showed off Windows XP running a Web cam, something that has been nearly impossible in Virtual PC, which has always had spotty USB support.
'We test hundreds of USB devices. We have the framework in place to support these devices,' Krishnamurti said. /zimages/2/28571.gif For its part, Parallels choose WWDC to release a minor upgrade that improved support of USB devices now—including Web cams and Windows Mobile 5 devices—with a promise of full USB 2.0 later this year. 'Were trying to make USB really seamless,' said Parallels Marketing Manager Ben Rudolph. For each of VMwares announced features, Parallels matched it with one of its own. For example, VMwares demo included support for symmetric multiprocessing, supporting both cores in the Core Duo processor. At the same time, Parallels new update lets users choose whether they want to enhance performance on Mac OS X or Windows by changing a setting of a hard drive cache.
Parallels and VMware look to be taking some different approaches to feature sets and thereby addressing different market segments. Like Microsoft did with Virtual PC for Mac, Parallels is focusing on user-level features that revolve around integrating the Windows and Mac OS X environment. The first version lets Mac users select Windows applications from the Mac menu bar. The Parallels update supports full mapping of the Mac keyboard and allows the Mac CD Eject key to work from within Windows.
/zimages/2/28571.gif Meanwhile, VMware offers a different model for using virtualization. VMwares focus has been to deliver virtual machines preinstalled with software suites for testing or for easy deployment by IS departments. VMware aims to bring this concept to Mac users. 'At our VMTN VMware Technology Network Web site, Mac users will have access to the 250 virtual appliances with preinstalled Windows applications packaged as virtual machines,' said Krishnamurti. However, VMwares user model appears to break down on the Mac.
On Windows, the virtual machines are running native, bread-and-butter Windows applications that users run every day. But its difficult to see how this model can work for the Mac since VMware cant run Mac OS X in a virtual machine. Mac users wont be able to load pre-installed Mac OS X virtual machines with preinstalled applications. Krishnamurti would not comment on whether a future version would support Mac OS X as a guest operating system on Intel-based Macs. VMware would also not comment on whether the issue was technical or a prohibition from Apple. The Mac OS X license does not permit running the operating system on non-Apple hardware.
You can set up shared folders in guest operating systems to share files between your Mac and your Windows and other virtual machines. In the Sharing panel of a virtual machine's Settings window, you can select shared folders on your Mac to make available to the virtual machine. This feature requires VMware Tools. You can mirror folders in your Windows 8, Windows 7, Windows Vista, or Windows XP virtual machine and your Mac. Mirrored folders match key folders in the virtual machine with their corresponding Mac folders: Desktop, Documents, Downloads, Movies, Music, and Pictures. To use shared folders, you must configure your virtual machine settings to enable shared folders and to specify which directories on your Mac are to be shared.
The shared folders can be in your Mac file system or they can be network directories accessible from your Mac. The guest operating system determines how shared folders appear.
You can view shared folders in certain Windows, Solaris, and Linux guests. For a list, see.
![Mac Mac](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125452098/260192967.png)
Before you can view shared folders, you must enable and configure the shared folders function.