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Vmware fusion m1 processor
Vmware fusion m1 processor











  1. Vmware fusion m1 processor pro#
  2. Vmware fusion m1 processor iso#
  3. Vmware fusion m1 processor plus#
  4. Vmware fusion m1 processor tv#

I was like screw it, I'll just add Surface tablet to my bag instead. And at some point it just got too cumbersome.

vmware fusion m1 processor

Vmware fusion m1 processor tv#

But some places have custom remotes that don't allow you to change TV input source, so I added a universal remote to my bag. So I added HDMI cable to my bag, to connect to hotel TVs.

Vmware fusion m1 processor plus#

Plus if for whatever reason it didn't boot, or you can't connect to it, I needed a screen. I gave up on minipc mostly because of wonky wifi access point functionality in Windows, Microsoft killed it and you need to do some hacking to make it work.

vmware fusion m1 processor

Vmware fusion m1 processor pro#

And just two weeks ago I got Surface Pro 7 plus. Since I made this post I upgraded to MBP 14, 32 cores, 64GB/8TB. I'm (or actually was) using this minipc as WiFi access point, connect to it from Mac and remote into it. My understanding is that you need Thunderbolt to set up network over USB-C cable. I got a power trigger from ebay to be able to use PD chargers, but that's it. Essentially USB-C shaped 12V only power plug. It has USB-C but it is only for power, and it doesn't support PD protocol. Is this the sort of thing that you're doing?Ĭlick to expand.Not quite. This would mean that I could buy a couple of these miniPC devices (one as a spare backup), but all the data and applications stored on a "share" in the Mac. stashing the data on the Mac for backups and being able to have some form of generic Windows OS on the miniPC (preferably Window Server 2012). What I'd like is to be able to plug one into the MacBook Pro using USB-C for power and also get it to share the 'disc' from the mac to the miniPC, i.e. This "pocket PC" thing looks very promising indeed. I think there's no chance of this every improving Apple couldn't care and MS aren't going to put in any effort. Whilst there's the chance that QEMU might work in the future, it'll be like going back to the PowerPC Mac days where the Win-DOS VM's ran like a snail. This means all the phone-home licensing crap and goodness knows what else. It's possible to run VMWare & Parallels but only if WinDos10/11 ARM is installed. The M1 processors stop this particular workflow. I'm very happy with this keep the damn Microsoft rubbish to a minimum and not need any of this anti-virus guff as the VMs are isolated. This simply isn't possible unless running Win10/11 which is not acceptable (bloat doesn't go half way to describing why not).įor the past 16 years I've run MacBook Pros (and even PowerPC Macs) and virtualised a load of Windows instances ranging from Win3.1 and Win95 (just for a laugh, not serious use) through XP which works exceedingly well running some old applications, through various Windows server builds including Windows Server 2012 which is used for running the Visual Studio environment for dot net development (supporting and developing old but still current dotnet applications). My issue is I'd like to run a Visual Studio development environment on an M1. This seems like an excellent way of getting the best of both worlds in the absence of being able to run a WinDOS VM on an M1. A picture, with M1 MBP for size reference, weight like 200 grams, don't even feel it in the bag. Plus a handy, although slow, wireless data storage.

vmware fusion m1 processor

Have it set as wifi access point (2.4 only) and just remote into it from Mac. No battery, needs 12V power supply, USB-C but no PD. Mind you, my VMs are not loaded, thats pre-deployment.

vmware fusion m1 processor

Once created it boots VM in less than a minute and I can do my stuff without really noticing any slowdowns. My M1 MBP does the same in VMWare fusion with same fedora but ARM version in about 6 minutes.

Vmware fusion m1 processor iso#

Surprisingly snappy, spinning Fedora 34 on it in VMware Workstation from DVD iso took 13 minutes. It is about the size of 2.5'' external SSD enclosure. I got one of those from Amazon, for like $250, quad core Celeron, passive cooled, 8GB RAM, 256 eMMC + open nvme m.2 slot in which I have 4TB SSD. I travel a lot, so pulling 30-100GB from my server is not an option on hotel wifi. For a regular work I can do just fine in ARM VMs. The only thing I can't do on M1 is x86 VMs, and sometimes I need to spin one, configure and load on customer site, check somebody's backup etc.













Vmware fusion m1 processor