VMware Fusion is easy to use and is available for free trial for 30 days after which users have to pay to continue using the software. VMware Fusion allows Mac users run Windows, Linux and other operating systems on their computers seamlessly without needing to reboot.
offers a virtual machine for Mac Users called VMware Fusion. The original VMware Workstation Player does not support Mac OS but VMware Inc. VMware Workstation Player for Mac is called VMware Fusion. As a result of this, we cannot comment on or help you here with your issue.
Mac OS may only be virtualized on top of official Apple-branded hardware using either Fusion or ESXi.
You may be unaware, but what you're looking to do is very much illegal and in violation of the EULAs of both Apple and VMware. My guess is that some non-certified programming will be allowed in interpreted sandboxed environments for a good while.How To Install Macos Mojave 11 4 on Vmware workstation 15-Windows 10 Mojave 11.4. It's win-win for 99% of the users and for Apple.
only Apple's revenues and retail base matters. even Apple developers may like some of it, as it will cut down free competition in exchange for sharing revenues at the appstore. OSX app developers will stay and become certified: any iOS and Mac development will probably take place in a trusted (virtualized non-native specialized?) environment and/or the cloud and/or require an unlocking code that only certified developers can obtain. why wouldn't Apple abandon non-Apple-app programmers? maybe 1 in 100 buyers program their computers for themselves, so the sale losses to programmers who would switch away will be small. it will become like iOS in this respect.įrankly, this makes sense for 99% of their clientele *and* it will make Apple money, because the appstore makes them money. I am guessing that within 5 years, Apple will/should stop supporting OSX for non-Apple app programmers, and require that all apps be purchased through the appstore.
I can see that apple is going more and more towards focusing on the consumer market, so I need to slowly switch over to linux.Īpple started down the road to a consumer marker with the release of the iPod much less everything else since, however what specifically can you no longer do with Mac OS X or now OS X or think you'll no longer be able to do that you feel the need to "slowly switch over to linux"? BTW Unless Apple outright stops supporting its core technologies I don't buy the argument that one needs to "slowly switch over to linux"! So since VMware Workstation would be run under Linux and your not virtualizing Mac OS X Lion or OS X Mountain Lion under themselves on Apple-branded hardware then help cannot be provided to you as it could/would be deemed a violation of the VMware Community Terms of Use by helping you to violate Apple's SLA's in the use case scenario you're suggesting. VMware does not support running any version of Mac OS X under VMware Workstation! Also even though you have Apple-branded hardware, Apple's SLA's for the legally virtualizable versions of Mac OS X, more specifically Mac OS X Lion and OS X Mountain Lion then section 2B(iii) requires it be virtualized while running under Mac OS X or OS X Mountain Lion respectively, much less compliance with all other SLA requirements.