I'm upgrading my memory to 8 on my Mac Book Pro so I will also have more memory
soon!
On 10 Dec 2010, at 18:34, Kimberly thurman wrote:
> Hi:
>
> I run Windows 7 in VMWare Fusion on my Mac with no trouble whatsoever. I run
> them both at the same time and switch back and forth effortlessly. O
iday, December 10, 2010 1:34 PM
> Subject: Re: vm fusion or bootcamp
>
>
>> Hi:
>>
>> I run Windows 7 in VMWare Fusion on my Mac with no trouble whatsoever. I
>> run them both at the same time and switch back and forth effortlessly. Of
>> course, I have 8 g
Hi!
What do you mean that the boot process isn't accessible? I haven't seen any
trouble so far.
Also, the downside to Fusion is that, if you don't allocate the proper amount
of memory to your system, you will get what is called a "memory swap". This
means that Mac OS X and your virtual machine
Go with fusion, I use it my self and love it.
Fusion allows you to run both windows and your Mac OSX environment at the same
time. Boot Camp only allows you to use one at a time. Also, the boot process
with boot camp isn't accessible I don't believe. I don't think it's impossible
to use but
HI:
Would vmware fusion run on a Mac Air? Thanks!
Isaac
- Original Message -
From: "Kimberly thurman"
To:
Sent: Friday, December 10, 2010 1:34 PM
Subject: Re: vm fusion or bootcamp
Hi:
I run Windows 7 in VMWare Fusion on my Mac with no trouble whatsoever. I
run th
Hi:
I run Windows 7 in VMWare Fusion on my Mac with no trouble whatsoever. I run
them both at the same time and switch back and forth effortlessly. Of course,
I have 8 gigs of ram in a late 2009 Macbook Pro 13 inch. The ram is the key.
If you don't have enough stick to Boot Camp. I have no
Hello:
Personally, I recommend VM fusion. The update to fusion which was
just released seems to have fixed the audio issues. At least, the
ones I noticed.
Additionally, using Fusion lets you still run mac programs while doing
stuff in a windows environment. My understanding is that bootcamp
do